The Star Poems in Tomb-Sweeping Day

The poems of the stars in Tomb-Sweeping Day are as follows:

1. "Seeing Father Qingming in Reward Season" is partly cloudy and partly sunny, and the purple trails in the fragrant suburbs are light and dusty. The flying flowers whirl away the spring, and continue to think about the sun. The dream is bitter, and the warbler cries, but the sorrow is too much to call the teacher. Frequent scratching of short hair in the cold water adds a few stars.

2. It's a pity that it's sunny and rainy, so you must look at Shuidong Pavilion in good spring. Peach blossoms are like horses, and willow trees are green. In chun yin, the wind and rain are dark and clear, and the grass is full of greenery. The twelfth floor is leaning all over, and there is silence outside the Yanying curtain.

3. "Occasionally Feeling on Qingming Day" is like waving a wine flag in the east wind, and it is light cold and light warm when smoking is banned. Thousands of willows hang down to the ground, and I don't know that there is separation between people.

Tomb-Sweeping Day customs:

1. Worship ancestors and sweep graves. Tomb-sweeping in Qingming Festival is commonly known as going to the grave. According to local customs and habits, people bring fruits, food, paper money and other items to the cemetery, put the offerings in front of the cemetery, incinerate the paper money, add some new soil to the grave, and then kowtow in front of the tomb to worship, so they can pack up the offerings and go home.

2. Fold the willow to bid farewell. Since the Han Dynasty, people have gradually formed the custom of parting at Qingming Festival, so as to wish each other peace. "Willow" and "stay" are homophonic, meaning to be reluctant to part with it and stay as much as possible. At the same time, relatives and friends who want to leave are like willow branches in other places, which can quickly take root and survive everywhere, all of which are entrusted with good wishes for relatives and friends.

3. Swing. The custom of swinging in Tomb-Sweeping Day has a long history. It was first called Qianqiu, and then it was changed to swing. The earliest swings were usually made of branches and then tied with ribbons. Later, it gradually developed into a swing made of two ropes and pedals. The custom of swinging in Qingming can not only exercise your body, but also exercise your courage.

4. Tug of war. Tug-of-war originated in the late Spring and Autumn Period, when it was called "pulling the hook" and "strengthening the hook", and began to be called "tug-of-war" in the Tang Dynasty. Tug-of-war means that equal numbers of two sides pull a thick rope and pull each other out of the river boundary, even if they win. During the reign of Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty, a large tug-of-war competition was held during the reign of Tomb-Sweeping Day, and it gradually evolved into a folk custom in Tomb-Sweeping Day.