Current location - Quotes Website - Excellent quotations - Lantern Festival famous aphorisms and poems
Lantern Festival famous aphorisms and poems

1. Famous ancient poems about the Lantern Festival

1. Thousands of doors are opened and thousands of lights are lit, and the capital is moved in the middle of the first lunar month. ——Zhang Hu "Lights on the 15th day of the first lunar month"

2. I love the scenery of the Lantern Festival on the 15th day of the lunar month, with the beautiful moonlight and brilliant lights. ——The nameless "Order of Guigui·Yuanxiao"

3. The moonlight lanterns fill the imperial capital, and the fragrant carriages and treasures cover the narrow thoroughfares. ——Li Shangyin's "Watching the Lanterns and Enjoying Music"

4. A banquet in Jinli and a beautiful orchid jar in the early years. ——Lu Zhaolin's "Fifteen Nights Watching Lanterns"

5. I am prosperous when I am not busy, and I am ashamed to chase the local Sai Zigu. ——Li Shangyin's "Watching Lanterns and Enjoying Music"

2. Famous poems about the Lantern Festival

1. On Lantern Festival this year, the moon and lanterns remain the same. ——Ouyang Xiu's "Shengchazi·Yuanxi"

2. At five o'clock, the music and songs disperse, and the moon is bright and the lights are sparse. ——He Zhu's "Siyue People·When the East Wind in Zifu blows out at night"

3. Jinwu cannot help the night, and the jade leakage should not be urged. ——Su Weiwei's "The Fifteenth Night of the First Month"

4. On the willow branches above the moon, people make appointments after dusk. ——Ouyang Xiu, "Sheng Cha Zi·Yuan Xiu"

5. On the night of Yuan Dynasty last year, the lights in the flower market were as bright as day. ——Ouyang Xiu's "Shengchazi·Yuanxi"

6. Who teaches the red lotus night every year? The two places meditate and know each other. ——Jiang Kui's "Partridge Sky: Dreaming on New Year's Eve"

7. The fire trees and silver flowers are closing, and the iron locks of the star bridge are opening. ——Su Weiwei's "The Fifteenth Night of the First Month"

The Lantern Festival is a traditional festival in China since ancient times. Lantern viewing began in ancient times when people held torches in the countryside to drive away insects and beasts, hoping to reduce pest damage and pray for a good harvest. To this day, people in some areas of southwestern China still make torches out of reeds or tree branches on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month, and hold the torches high in groups to dance in fields or grain drying fields. Since the Sui, Tang and Song Dynasties, it has become more prosperous. Tens of thousands of singers and dancers participated in the performance, from dusk to dawn, and then stopped at dusk.