Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - The 24 Solar Terms - What does it mean to miss old friends when it rains in Mao Mao?

What does it mean to miss old friends when it rains in Mao Mao?

It's raining on a green day, thinking of the old friend: it means that the yin is hiding and the yang is getting stronger.

This poem was written by Bai Juyi, a famous poet in the Tang Dynasty in China. It shows the poet's feeling of missing his old friend when he walks in spring, and expresses his inner feelings by stepping on grass in drizzle and touching his face in spring breeze. The whole poem is simple and profound, with sincere and restrained emotions, which makes people feel profound and touching.

This catchy poem complements our mood of walking and sightseeing in our leisure time, so it is widely quoted in the traditional culture of China and has become one of the classic poems loved by the people.

Tomb-Sweeping Day, also known as the Youth Day, Youth Day. It has both humanistic and natural connotations. It is not only a traditional festival to worship ancestors, but also one of the "24 solar terms".

Tomb-Sweeping Day has a long history, which originated from ancient ancestral beliefs and spring sacrifices. It embodies the national spirit, inherits the sacrificial culture of Chinese civilization, and expresses people's moral feelings of respecting their ancestors and inheriting their ambitions. It is a festival to remember revolutionary martyrs and war heroes.

Meanwhile, Qingming is at the turn of mid-spring and late spring. At this time, spring is back to the earth, full of vitality, and peach blossoms, willow cotton and gold are hanging, which is a good time for spring outing in the suburbs. Why not make an appointment with some good friends and go for a spring outing together?

Tomb-Sweeping Day, also known as outing festival, outing festival, March festival, ancestor worship festival, etc. It was celebrated at the turn of mid-spring and late spring. Tomb-Sweeping Day originated from the ancestral belief and the custom of worshipping spring in ancient times, which has both natural and humanistic connotations. It is both a natural solar term and a traditional festival.