1. The night is about to end in a year, and no one has returned from thousands of miles away.
This sentence comes from "New Year's Eve at the Stone Station" by the Tang Dynasty poet Dai Shulun. It was written on New Year's Eve when the poet was still on his way home. The family was supposed to have New Year's Eve dinner together, but on the way home, the poet felt deeply and couldn't express his deep homesickness.
2. There will be no time next year, and I may be wasting my worries.
This sentence comes from "Shou Sui" by Su Shi, one of the Eight Great Masters of the Tang and Song Dynasties. The tradition on New Year's Eve is to stay up late with family members, laugh and talk about the past years, talk about family affairs, and think about the future of the coming year. Life. The poet has hopes and worries for the new year in his heart. He is already old and warns himself to cherish time. Time flies by one year after another, so he must seize the beautiful years.
3. I miss my hometown tonight, and it will be another year of frost on my temples tomorrow.
This sentence comes from "The Great Night Work" by contemporary poet Gao Shi. This sentence was also uttered by the poet on New Year's Eve. The poet was still wandering away during the New Year, missing his hometown relatives to reunite together, and thinking that New Year's Eve was over and a new year was coming, and that he might not be able to go home to celebrate the New Year. can feel the longing and helplessness more truly.
4. The fallen plum blossoms have passed the remaining wax, and the hometown returns to drunkenness and the New Year.
This sentence comes from "Send Off a Friend in Xiangkou" by Li Pin, a poet of the Tang Dynasty. This sentence combines winter plum blossoms with New Year reunion, saying that after the plum blossoms have bloomed, they are already withered plum blossoms. December is coming to an end and the first month is coming. How pleasant it will be to return to the hometown to reunite with family and friends to celebrate the New Year. This sentence depicts the scene of the New Year, and a peaceful atmosphere of family joy emerges before our eyes.
5. The New Year brings rain and clear weather, and the voice of God is everywhere.
This sentence comes from "Shaoge" by Wen Tingyun, a poet of the Tang Dynasty. There are many traditional cultural customs in the New Year. This poem records the lively custom of racing the gods during the New Year. In the first month of the year, sometimes it rains in the spring, and sometimes it is sunny. People happily enjoy lantern festivals and race the gods. It is the so-called lively New Year.
6. Eternity is like yesterday, one year plus one morning.
This sentence comes from "The New Year in the Meeting" by Gu Feixiong, a poet of the Tang Dynasty. This sentence says that New Year’s Eve has passed in the same way since ancient times. As soon as New Year’s Eve passes, it is a new year. The poet laments the rush of time and the arrival of the New Year. Sometimes we also think that no matter the joys and sorrows, no matter the wind and rain, the New Year always arrives as promised, never a step too early or too late.