Five Mid-Autumn Poems: It rains and reunion is the best.

Wu qiuyan

Smoke clouds become brocade, and the idle pool is dizzy by the sun.

The wall is low and the bamboo shadow is repaired, and the bridge is far from the car mark.

There are thousands of lights, songs and drinks.

Help the wind shine on the tree, and the boy won't open the door.

Five Laws: Meet with friends in Mid-Autumn Festival.

Good friend today, before a toast.

Drinking three hundred with you will take me five thousand years.

The wind and the moon are boundless, and flowers fly in the fountain of youth.

It's raining in Guangxi, so reunion is better.

Lvqiji Guilin chainsaw

Come and go, don't forget that the Lijiang River is far away and the sunset is oblique.

Stop drinking Huasan wine and stir-fry Fuding tea on the moon.

Idleness has never stopped, and acacia has never stopped dreaming.

I was washing clothes in Fang Fei, Mo Wen, and it rained lightly and planted new August flowers.

Five-stop Egret Yin Gui Hualong Jing

Holding laurel gold and silver, sparkling and fragrant.

Cold cicadas wail and sing autumn cool from now on.

Qi Jue Qiu GUI

The cold light is fading away, and whoever is drunk is drunk.

The earth is bleak and haggard, and only the wind blows and hates it deeply.

Mid-Autumn Festival is one of the four traditional festivals in China, also known as the full moon festival, full moon birthday, Mid-Autumn Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, Reunion Festival and so on. At first, the festival of "offering sacrifices to the moon" was held on the "autumnal equinox" of the twenty-fourth solar terms of the lunar calendar, and later it was moved to the fifteenth day of the eighth lunar month. In some places, the Mid-Autumn Festival is held on August 16th of the lunar calendar.

The Mid-Autumn Festival originated in ancient times, popularized in the Han Dynasty, shaped in the early Tang Dynasty and prevailed after the Song Dynasty. Mid-Autumn Festival is a festival for family and friends to reunite with the full moon. Since ancient times, there have been customs such as offering sacrifices to the moon, enjoying the moon, eating moon cakes, playing with lanterns, enjoying osmanthus and drinking osmanthus wine, which are slightly different from place to place.