Joke Collection Website - Bulletin headlines - Five-character quatrains in Tomb-Sweeping Day's ancient poems

Five-character quatrains in Tomb-Sweeping Day's ancient poems

Mourning day, drizzle like tears; Pedestrians on the road want to die. Excuse me, where is the restaurant? The shepherd boy pointed to Xinghua Village.

Qingming is a poem by Du Mu, a writer in the Tang Dynasty. When Tomb-Sweeping Day comes, it is drizzling and pedestrians on the road are picturesque. Asked the local people where to buy wine to relieve hangover, the shepherd boy just smiled and pointed to the distant Xinghuashan Village.

This is a poem written by Du Mu, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. These words went down in history: in September of Huichang four years, Du Mu moved to Chizhou to make a secretariat. This quatrain does not use an uncommon word, an allusion or a obscure emotion, but uses straightforward language to write the seasonal characteristics of Qingming and the decline of a person's life.