Five quatrains about the Mid-Autumn Festival

The five-character quatrains about the Mid-Autumn Festival are as follows:

1. Raise your glass to the bright moon and make three people in the shadow. ——Li Bai's "Drinking Alone under the Moon"

2. There is a moon in Songjiang River at the beginning, and there is no wind in Yishui. ——Bai Juyi "Replying to a Dream: Playing with Moonlight on the Night of August 15th"

3. Advocate to help the Qing Dynasty appreciate it, and the geese rise from Tingzhou. ——Su Che's "Shui Tiao Ge Tou·Xuzhou Mid-Autumn Festival"

4. The bright moon rises on the sea, and the end of the world is at this time. ——"Looking at the Moon and Huaiyuan"

5. If there is no moon this night, the whole year will be in vain. ——"Mid-Autumn Festival"

6. The bright moon hangs in the autumn sky, moistened with lustrous dew. ——"Feelings Under the Moon at Autumn Night"

7. Look up at the bright moon and lower your head to think about your hometown. ——Li Bai's "Quiet Night Thoughts"

8. Good times must be used with difficulty. ——Chen's "Jiangchengzi·Mid-Autumn Rain Early Rain and Sunny Night"

9. The round soul is in the cold sky, and it is said that the whole world is the same. ——Li Qiao's "Two Poems on the Mid-Autumn Moon·Part 2"

10. The sky will clean the world tonight with the moon. ——Liu Yuxi "Playing with the Moon on the Night of August 15th"

11. The beautiful woman beside the Qingjiang River is complaining more and more every night. ——Wang Changling "Playing with the Moon and Reminiscing about Cui Shaofu in Shanyin with Di Nanzhai"

12. The moon comes at night in the mountains, but I haven't seen it until dawn. ——Haowen's "Nizhuang Mid-Autumn Festival"

13. The bright moon rises above the Tianshan Mountains, among the vast sea of ??clouds. ——Li Bai's "Guanshan Moon"

14. We will travel together forever, and we will meet each other in Miao Yunhan. ——Li Bai's "Drinking Alone Under the Moon".

15. The full moon flies into the mirror, and returns to the heart to fold the sword. ——"Two Poems on the Moon on the 15th of August"

The meaning of five-character quatrains

1. Five-character quatrains are a genre of traditional Chinese poetry, referred to as Wujue, which refers to the five characters A four-sentence poem that conforms to the standard of rhythmic poetry belongs to the category of modern poetry. This style originated from the Yuefu poems of the Han Dynasty, was deeply influenced by the folk songs of the Six Dynasties, and became mature and finalized in the Tang Dynasty. Only twenty five-character quatrains can show fresh pictures and convey various true artistic conceptions.

2. The characteristic of the five-character quatrain lies in its brevity and conciseness. Each poem usually only has twenty words, but it often expresses rich content and deep emotions. Its sentence structure is five words per line, usually two or four lines above and below. The writing of five-character quatrains emphasizes the neatness of meter, and rhyme and rhythm are both important.

3. Five-character quatrains were very popular in the Tang Dynasty, especially the works of poets such as Du Fu and Wang Wei. The five-character quatrains have a wide range of themes, including landscape descriptions, character descriptions, lyrical expressions, etc. These short poems can be enjoyed as independent works or as a prelude or conclusion to longer poems.