A little poem about Mid-Autumn Festival

The short poems about Mid-Autumn Festival are as follows:

1. Tonight, the moon is full of hope, and I don't know who Qiu Si will fall into. -Wang Jian's "Looking at the Moon at Fifteen Nights"

Analysis: Tonight, people are looking up at the bright moon in the sky. I don't know whose love for Qiu Si is.

2, silent autumn night, full of love. -Mid-Autumn Festival in Long Fu

Analysis: On the silent Mid-Autumn Festival night, the moon walked out of the boudoir like a sentimental girl.

Chang 'e should regret stealing the elixir. -Li Shangyin's Chang 'e

Analysis: Chang 'e may regret stealing the elixir of life, but now she is facing the blue sky and blue sea, and she is suffering from loneliness night after night.

4. If you don't meet a bright night in this life, where will you see the bright moon next year? -Su Shi's Mid-Autumn Festival Full Moon

Analysis: Every Mid-Autumn Festival night in my life, the moonlight is mostly covered by clouds, and I rarely encounter such beautiful scenery as today. It is really hard to get! But where shall I go to enjoy the moon next Mid-Autumn Festival?

The bright moon rises from the mountains in the sky, in the infinite haze of the sea of clouds. -Guan Shanyue of Li Bai

Analysis: A bright moon rises from Qilian Mountain and crosses the vast sea of clouds.

6. The sky in Wan Li is cloudless and wet, and the stars are pouring out. -Mid-Autumn Moon in Miracle

Analysis: The sky is clear and cloudless, the clothes are wet with dew, and a full moon rises outside the starlight.

Name source:

Mid-Autumn Festival is the Mid-Autumn Festival. In the second month of autumn, its symbol is the full moon in May, which is in the middle of Sanqiu, so it is called Mid-Autumn Festival. This night, the moonlight is brighter than usual, also called "moonlight". Because Mid-Autumn Festival is in autumn and August, it is also called "Autumn Festival" and August Festival. It is also called "Moon Festival" and "Moon Festival" because the moon and Yue Bai are sacrifices.

Mid-Autumn Festival is also called "Reunion Festival" and "Daughter's Day" because families get together and married daughters go home for reunion. During the Mid-Autumn Festival, all kinds of melons and fruits are mature and listed, which is called the "Fruit Festival". Dong people call it "Pumpkin Festival" and Mulao people call it "Afterlife Festival".

Festival development:

Mid-Autumn Festival is popular in Han Dynasty, which is a period of economic and cultural exchanges and integration between the north and the south of China, and cultural exchanges between different places spread together. According to records, during the Mid-Autumn Festival or beginning of autumn in the Han Dynasty, there were activities of respecting the elderly and giving coarse cakes. There are also written records about Mid-Autumn Festival in Jin Dynasty, but it is not very common. Before the Jin Dynasty, Mid-Autumn Festival was not popular in northern China.