The ancient poems about "New Year's Day" include:
1. *** celebrates the New Year with laughter, and the red rock ladies give plum blossoms. They toasted Tusu wine to each other and drank victory tea among themselves. ——Dong Biwu's "The New Year's Day Mouth Occupies Liu Yazi's Charming Rhyme"
2. Mijuyao Xiaguang Trembling Wine. Green cypress, red pepper, thin strips of green silk chives. I also wish the golden cup to live a long life - Li Tingrui's "Butterfly Loves Flowers (New Year's Day)"
3. As the evening turns to clear the leakage of the pot, the Changle Bell is startled in the morning. The meandering wind prohibits visitors, and I pretend to be asleep and guard the copper dragon. ——Xu Yanbo's "New Year's Day Morning with Tongweishe People"
4. The cold is still severe when the weather is gone, the snow has not dried yet in spring, and pity is easily lost in the passing years. Dare to seek peace for the guests. ——He Ruqiao's "New Year's Day"
5. Ninghua, Qingliu, Guihua, the narrow roads are slippery with deep woods and moss. Where to go today, directly to the foot of Wuyi Mountain. ——Mao Zedong's "Ru Meng Ling·New Year's Day"
6. Regardless of whether the pines and snow are everywhere, the pen bed, tea stove, etc. are spent every year. Poverty and sorrow are rewarded with longevity and health, and many plum blossoms are broken to offer to God. ——Ai Xingfu's "New Year's Day"
7. The cold stars in the sky gather at dawn, and the good atmosphere overflows the clear sky at the corner of the sea. The bright sun emerges from Donghua, and the long-lasting wind blows from Antarctica. ——Zhang Tai's "New Year's Day"
8. The sound of firecrackers eliminates the new year, and the spring breeze brings warmth to Tusu; thousands of households always exchange new peaches for old charms. ——Wang Anshi's "New Year's Day"
9. Immortal Ziyou teaches the treasure recipe, and the young people are allowed to taste it first. The eight gods were ordered to adjust the golden cauldron and rejuvenate the whole bag. The golden liquid is six thousand feet deep in the well at night, and the spring breeze enters the nine-cloud wine cellar at dawn. Then he counted the phoenix calendar from the beginning, and visited Zuixiang every day with a cup. ——Qu You's "Tusu Wine?"
10. Don't ask for a meeting, but ask for a visit. The house is filled with famous papers. I also throw in a few pieces of paper with others, the world is too simple but not too empty. ——Wen Zhengming's "New Year's Greetings"
New Year's Day Explanation:
China's New Year's Day, according to legend, originated from Zhuan Xu, one of the Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors, and has a history of more than 3,000 years. The word "New Year's Day" first appeared in the "Book of Jin": "Emperor Zhuan took the first month of Mengxia as the Yuan Dynasty, which is actually the spring of New Year's Day in Zhengshuo". During the Northern and Southern Dynasties, Xiao Ziyun's poem "Jie Ya" in the Southern Dynasty also recorded that "New Year's Day for all four seasons, early spring for longevity".
China was the first to call the first day of the first lunar month "New Year's Day". Yuan means "beginning" and "beginning", and dan refers to "days". New Year's Day collectively means "the initial days", that is, The first day of the year. The date on which the first day of the first lunar month was calculated was also very inconsistent before Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty. Therefore, the New Year's Day month and day in the past dynasties are not consistent. The lunar calendar of the Xia Dynasty took Meng Xi month (Yuan month) as the first month, the Yin calendar of the Shang dynasty took the twelfth month (December) as the first month, and the Zhou calendar of the Zhou dynasty took the winter month (November) as the first month. After Qin Shihuang unified China, he took Yangchun month (October) as the first month, that is, the first day of October as New Year's Day. Starting from Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty, Meng Xiyue (January) was designated as the first month, and the first day of Meng Xiyue (the first day of the first lunar month in the lunar calendar) was called New Year's Day, which was used until the end of the Qing Dynasty. But this is the lunar calendar, that is, the lunar calendar or the lunar calendar, and it is not what we call New Year's Day today.