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Poems about Mid-Autumn Festival

Examples of poems about Mid-Autumn Festival are as follows:

1, the Mid-Autumn Festival in Fayun Temple is another official birthday.

2. Red lanterns span thousands of lights, and bamboo and bamboo each lay a pole.

3, the small nursery is still hot after catching cold, burning incense and not sitting and reading Tang poetry.

4. How can bluebirds catch birds when moths have not arrived in Yingzhou?

5, sheep rights must be stripped of gold bars, and Wen Qiao will eventually become a jade mirror.

6, silently burning incense in the immortal view, knowing that the teacher is far away in Yujing Mountain.

7. Today is the Mid-Autumn Festival, and the weather is too early.

What is the definition of Mid-Autumn Festival?

China Fiber Festival is the 15th day of the seventh lunar month, also known as "July Festival" and "July Half", and it is also called the four traditional ancestor worship festivals in China together with New Year's Eve, Tomb-Sweeping Day and Double Ninth Festival.

Confucianism, Buddhism and Taoism are all festivals on this day, but they have different names. Taoism is called "Mid-Autumn Festival"; Confucianism calls it "ancestor worship festival"; Buddhism is called "Orchid Club".

Some customs of Mid-Autumn Festival:

I. Purdue in the Central Plains

Folklore says that after death, people will become ghosts and wander between heaven and earth. Purdue in the Central Plains, that is, from the first day of the seventh lunar month to the seventh and thirtieth lunar months, is dedicated to offering sacrifices such as wine, meat, fruits, sweets and cakes, so that they can feel the warmth of the world, which is an extension of China's traditional benevolence thought.

Second, ancestor worship.

Mid-Autumn Festival is a traditional ancestor worship festival in China. According to folklore, ancestors will return to earth to visit their descendants on this day, so it is necessary to worship their ancestors, but the sacrificial activities are not limited to a certain day, as long as they are completed before the end of July.

There are different forms of ancestor worship activities in different places, but they are usually in front of graves, some offering sacrifices and some burning paper money.

Third, the river lamp.

Setting off river lanterns is a traditional custom of the Chinese nation, which is used to mourn the dead relatives and bless the living. People made colorful lanterns with wooden boards and colored paper, lit candles in the middle, and some even made a colorful paper boat.

At night, put paper boats and lights into the river and let them drift with the flow. Children stare at their own lamps to see how far they can drift, while the old man mumbles and prays.

Fourth, put the flame mouth.

Burning the sacred flame is a ritual often held in temples. Cigarette holder, a Buddhist term, describes a hungry ghost who craves food and spits out flames. Give food to the hungry ghost and let the flames pass. Since the Liang Dynasty, people in China have been holding activities such as setting up fasting, supporting monks and lighting fires on the Mid-Yuan Festival.