The roar of firecrackers, the old year has passed; The warm spring breeze ushered in the New Year, and people happily drank the newly brewed Tu Su wine.
The rising sun sheds light on doors of each household, New peachwood charm is put up to replace the old.
In the sound of firecrackers, the old year was sent away and the new year was ushered in. People greeted the warm spring breeze and drank Tu Su wine heartily. Thousands of families are illuminated by the glory of the rising sun. Every Spring Festival, they always replace the old Spring Festival couplets with new ones.
This poem vividly shows the renewal of Vientiane by describing the lively and joyful atmosphere of the Spring Festival. Poetry begins with a sentence closely related to the topic, rendering the festive atmosphere of the Spring Festival.
January, the Spring Festival, is the most grand and distinctive traditional festival in China and other East Asian cultural circles. In China, it refers to the first day of the first month, also known as the Lunar New Year. In China, the traditional Spring Festival refers to La Worship offering sacrifices to the kitchen god from the eighth day of the twelfth lunar month to the fifteenth day of the first lunar month, with New Year's Eve and the first day of the first lunar month as the climax.
During the Spring Festival, Han people and many ethnic minorities in China will hold various activities to celebrate. These activities mainly focus on offering sacrifices to gods and buddhas, offering sacrifices to ancestors, saying goodbye to the old year and welcoming the new year, and praying for a bumper harvest.