Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - Seven-line poems for young people

Seven-line poems for young people

The poems of the Seven-Unique Little Year are as follows:

1. Guoqiang's family is rich and dry, and the snow reflects the red plum and the wine is muddy. The blessing of the world prospers the country, and the spring calendar of the off-year is newly turned over.

2. The Lunar New Year is jubilant, and thousands of families sweep away the dust and smoke. The kitchen king returns to the house to say good things. The good news brought a hundred blessings.

3. The prelude of the Spring Festival is gradually opened, and the kitchen table is served with wine and delicacies. As soon as the broom removes the dirt, Mei Xiang will break the wax in the next few years.

4. The spring breeze gradually broke the cold smoke, and the fragrance of wax and wine floated drunk in the next year. Hu Na has plenty of food and clothing, and Niu Geng Fuze has a good mulberry field.

5. In the new year, when you come to Ruilinmen, the custom follows the fate to worship the soul of the kitchen. To be kind, to be virtuous, to be sincere and to be expected.

6. It's nearly the Spring Festival, and it's time to sweep the dust. Kitchen officials obey orders to spread public opinion, and grasp the report to clearly plant evil.

7, spread to king of people through the ages, sweeping away the dust and getting rid of the old Nachunyang. In the new year, fireworks pray for sincere worship, and the jade tiger comes to be auspicious.

China's culture is extensive and profound

1. Ballads are sung

The fifteenth book of songs, Guofeng, is a folk ballad in fifteen places? An ancestor felt it and couldn't help singing, so the first poem came from this. Everyone felt that they expressed their feelings, so they sang and sang.

2. Poems presented by Celebrities

Scholar-officials are extremely worried about dangerous current affairs, and out of concern for the stability of the ruling order, they write poems and offer them to the supreme ruler to attract attention, such as the poems in Daya and Xiaoya.