Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional virtues - Content of China's Ancient Spring Festival Poems Handwritten Newspaper

Content of China's Ancient Spring Festival Poems Handwritten Newspaper

The contents of the ancient poems in the Spring Festival handwritten newspaper are as follows:

It started one day this year, but it was empty a year ago. A hundred years of desolation should be the same as a year. (Yuan Zhen: Year after Year) Besides firecrackers, the spring breeze sends warmth into Tu Su. The rising sun sheds light on doors of each household, New peachwood charm is put up to replace the old. (Wang Anshi: "January Day") The north wind blows snow in the fourth day, and Jiarui Tianjiao is at the beginning of the year. Before the glass half full of wine could be lifted to celebrate, I was still writing Fu Tao in cursive script under the lamp. (Lu You: Yuanri).

Sweep the huts to clean up the hubbub and worship the nine heavens. Everything comes in spring to send wax, and tonight is the end of the year. Make a fire and roar with bamboo, and then listen to the praise of pepper when you are old. Wild travel predicts that farming will be good and snow will not disappear in three winters. (Dai Fugu: Except Night) I don't want to meet each other, just want to talk. I'm the name of every major newspaper. I also throw some paper at people. The world is too simple and empty. (Wen Zhiming: Happy New Year).

The Spring Festival generally refers to the first day of the first month, the first day of the year, also known as the lunar calendar, commonly known as "New Year"; But among the people, the Spring Festival in the traditional sense refers to the sacrifice of stoves from the 23rd or 24th of the twelfth lunar month in La Worship to the 19th of the first month.

During the Spring Festival, Han people and some ethnic minorities in China will hold various activities to celebrate. Customs of the Spring Festival The Spring Festival is an ancient festival in China and the most important festival in a year. How to celebrate this festival has formed some relatively fixed customs and habits in thousands of years of historical development, many of which are still handed down today.