Introduction: The poet Lin Jie must be familiar to many people, but do you know which dynasty Lin Jie came from? Next are the articles I have collected and organized for you, welcome to read!
Lin Jie (831-847), also known as Zhizhou, was a poet in the Tang Dynasty. He could compose poems at the age of six, and he could form a chapter as soon as he started writing. He is also good at calligraphy and chess. He died at the age of sixteen. "Complete Poems of the Tang Dynasty" contains two of his poems. "Begging for Skillful Skills" is a famous poem by Lin Jie, a poet from the Tang Dynasty, describing the grand occasion of folk begging for skills during the Chinese Valentine's Day.
Personal works
"Begging for Skills"
Tonight on the Chinese Valentine's Day, look at the blue sky, the morning glory and the weaver girl crossing the river bridge.
Every family begs for tricks and looks at the autumn moon, wearing tens of thousands of red silk threads.
"Altar of the Immortal King"
The feather guest has gone to the immortal road, and the vegetation of the alchemy furnace has withered.
I don’t know when it will return after thousands of years, but people will sweep away the old altar.
Biographies
The early evening of the seventh lunar month is commonly known as "Qixi Festival", also known as "Daughter's Day" and "Girl's Day". It is the day when the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl met on the Magpie Bridge across the "Tianhe" in the legend. In the past, the main folk activity of Qixi Festival was begging for skillful hands. The so-called begging for skillful hands meant begging the Weaver Girl for a pair of skillful hands. The most common way to beg for skill is to thread a needle against the moon. If the thread passes through the needle hole, it is called skill. This custom was most popular in the Tang and Song Dynasties.