Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - Complete works of classical poetry about Mid-Autumn Festival

Complete works of classical poetry about Mid-Autumn Festival

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

1, Mid-Autumn Moonlight, the whole family enjoys the moon together, the moon is round and bright, and the moon cakes are sweet and fragrant. Eat moon cakes, watch the moon, tickle, eat moon cakes, watch the moon, tickle. -Mid-Autumn Festival

On August 15th, the bright moon was in the sky. Grandpa plays with moon cakes for me. Moon cakes are round, sweet and fragrant. A moon cake, full of affection. Grandpa is an old Red Army. Grandpa treated me and kissed me. I sing for my grandfather and dedicate myself wholeheartedly to him. -"Grandpa hits me with moon cakes"

3. The moon is round in the sky, the cake is round and sweet, the face is round and smiling, and the table is round to celebrate the reunion! The moon is round and hanging in the sky, the cake is round and sweet, the face is round and smiling, and the table is round and happy. -"The Moon is Round"

4, the sun nurtures seedlings, sweat nurtures the earth, and hope is uneasy. The seed has covered my chest for a season. When the wind and rain came, the mountains and plains were red. The bright moon came lightly and raised a silver sickle. Tonight, before the rain comes, harvest the joy and return to the warehouse. -"Autumn Harvest"

The source of Mid-Autumn Festival:

The Mid-Autumn Festival originated from the worship of celestial phenomena and evolved from the worship of the autumn moon in ancient times. At first, the festival of "Sacrificing the Moon" was held on the "autumnal equinox" of the 24 solar terms in the Ganzhi calendar, and later it was moved to August 15 in the summer calendar (lunar calendar). In some places, the Mid-Autumn Festival is set on August 16 in the summer calendar. The Mid-Autumn Festival began in the early years of the Tang Dynasty and prevailed in the Song Dynasty. By the Ming and Qing Dynasties, it had become one of the traditional festivals in China, which was as famous as the Spring Festival.

Influenced by China culture, Mid-Autumn Festival is also a traditional festival for overseas Chinese in some countries in East and Southeast Asia, especially local Chinese. Customs: The customs of Mid-Autumn Festival include: stepping on the moon, offering sacrifices to the moon, enjoying the moon, chasing the moon, begging for photos, watching the tide, eating moon cakes, burning incense, offering sacrifices to ancestors, and solve riddles on the lanterns.