Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What are the poems about "remembering the lost relatives" in Mid-Autumn Festival?

What are the poems about "remembering the lost relatives" in Mid-Autumn Festival?

Sad Chen Juan

If you want to break your soul, it's hard to break it. If the mirror is like a water moon, it will not touch the dust, and the wind will burn the heart.

Afraid of hurting the spirit, it hurts the spirit, and the drifting clouds can't understand the past, so people are passers-by

Miscellaneous chapter

The lyre sings to the moon, and the jade bamboo reflects the mirror without dust.

I can't tell you how sad I am. It hurts when I can't sit still.

If you can get someone, you will burn your heart and lose your soul.

Wandering like an old dream, an old friend becomes a passerby.

Zuiqiuyue

The moon in Guangxi sets in mid-August.

Yu Ye Piao Xiang Yu Lou Dong

Brocade, who sent Hongyan?

Go with the flow and follow the wind.

Jiangchengzi

Yi Mao remembers the dream of the twelfth day of the first month.

Ten years of life and death are two boundless.

Never think, never forget.

A lonely grave thousands of miles away, desolate and nowhere to talk about.

Even if we don't know each other, our faces are dusty and our temples are frosty.

When night came, my dream suddenly came home. Xiao Xuan window, get dressed.

Care for each other without words, only a thousand lines of tears

It is estimated that the annual heartbroken place, moonlit night, short matsuoka.

Mid-Autumn Festival, also known as Mid-Autumn Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, August Festival, Moon Chasing Festival, Moon Worship Festival, Daughter's Day or Reunion Festival, is a traditional cultural festival popular in many ethnic groups and countries with Chinese cultural circles in China, and falls on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month. Because its value is only half that of Sanqiu, it is named, and some places set the Mid-Autumn Festival on August 16. 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 major festivals in China.

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. Since 2008, Mid-Autumn Festival has been listed as a national statutory holiday. On May 20th, 2006, it was listed in the first batch of national intangible cultural heritage by the State Council. The Mid-Autumn Festival has customs such as offering sacrifices to the moon, enjoying the moon, eating moon cakes, enjoying osmanthus and drinking osmanthus wine. Since ancient times, and spread to this day, it lasts for a long time. The Mid-Autumn Festival is a colorful and precious cultural heritage. The full moon is a symbol of people's reunion, a sustenance for missing their hometown and relatives, and hopes for a bumper harvest and happiness. Mid-Autumn Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, Spring Festival and Tomb-Sweeping Day are also called the four traditional festivals in China.