1. China people have always valued family reunion, family reunion and family happiness. It is said that I miss my relatives twice during the festival, not to mention the Mid-Autumn Festival, which symbolizes reunion and happiness.
2. Warm is the flavor of Mid-Autumn Festival. Under the osmanthus tree, in the ancient tree court, the family is sitting around the stone table, and the children are playing wildly in the court. For a moon cake and a gift, who cares? As long as you are happy.
3. I like the artistic conception of Mid-Autumn Festival. Under the round moonlight, round moon cakes and apples are ripe, and pears, grapes and other fruits are also on the market. In the moonlight, people are tasting festival food and talking about harvest. While enjoying the moon, I miss my relatives in a foreign land. The real saying is: I miss my relatives twice during the festive season.
4. Watching the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival, many different legends and beautiful fairy tales have been circulated among the people, and of course, the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon is the most familiar one. In multi-ethnic China, more than 2 ethnic groups are also celebrating the Mid-Autumn Festival. Although there are different ways to celebrate it, their moral is that they are all seeking prosperity, food and clothing, reunion and peace.
5. the autumn moon shines on the windowsill, and the cold wind is coming. The candle torch is sleepless and lonely, so how can the clear light solve my monologue? Wake up at midnight, the silence outside the window, in the bleak moonlight, more and more lonely and difficult to sleep, two lines of lovesick tears on the moonlit night, covered with curtains, like silver wind chimes, resounded through the heart in enlightenment.
6. I'm looking forward to the full moon tonight, and I don't know whose home Qiu Si will be. _ _ _ _ Wang Jian's fifteen nights looking at the moon to send a message to Du Langzhong
7. Chang 'e should regret stealing the elixir. _ _ _ _ Li Shangyin's Chang 'e
8. I hope people will live for a long time, and thousands of miles will be beautiful. _ _ _ _ Su Shi's Mid-Autumn Festival in Bingchen
9. This night is not good in my life, so where can I see the bright moon next year? _ _ _ _ Su Shi's Yangguanqu/Mid-Autumn Moon
1. Who is alone with * * * in the Mid-Autumn Festival? Look sadly at the north. _ _ _ _ Su Shi's Xijiang Moon A Big Dream
11. Memories of the Mid-Autumn Festival. Flowers are in the cup. The moon is in the cup. _ _ _ _ Xin Qiji's "A Cut of Plums Mid-Autumn Festival in January"
The origin of Mid-Autumn Festival
The 15th day of August in the lunar calendar is the traditional Mid-Autumn Festival in China and the second largest traditional festival in China after the Spring Festival. August 15th is just in the middle of autumn, so it is called Mid-Autumn Festival. China's ancient calendar called August in the middle of autumn "Mid-Autumn", so the Mid-Autumn Festival is also called "Mid-Autumn Festival".
Mid-Autumn Festival is an ancient festival, and it is an important custom to sacrifice and enjoy the moon. The ancient emperors had a social system of offering sacrifices to the sun in spring and the moon in autumn, and the people also had the style of offering sacrifices to the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival. Later, appreciating the moon was more important than offering sacrifices to the moon, and serious sacrifices turned into relaxed entertainment. The custom of enjoying the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival flourished in the Tang Dynasty, and many poets wrote poems about the moon in their masterpieces. In the Song, Ming and Qing Dynasties, the court and folk activities of enjoying the moon in Yue Bai were even larger. Up to now, there are many historic sites in China, such as Yue Bai altar, Moon Pavilion and Moon Tower. The "Moon Altar" in Beijing was built during the Jiajing period of the Ming Dynasty for the royal sacrifice to the moon. Whenever the Mid-Autumn Moon rises, a case is set up in the open air, and mooncakes, pomegranates, dates and other fruits are offered on the console table. After Yue Bai, the whole family sits around the table, talks over dinner and enjoys the bright moon. Now, the activities of offering sacrifices to the moon in Yue Bai have been replaced by large-scale and colorful activities of enjoying the moon by the masses.
According to historical records, the word "Mid-Autumn Festival" first appeared in Zhou Li. By the Wei and Jin Dynasties, there was a record of "telling Shangshu Town that cattle were confused, and mid-autumn evening and the left and right traveling incognito across the river". It was not until the early years of the Tang Dynasty that the Mid-Autumn Festival became a fixed festival. The Book of Tang Taizong records the Mid-Autumn Festival on August 15th. The prevalence of Mid-Autumn Festival began in the Song Dynasty, and by the Ming and Qing Dynasties, it was as famous as New Year's Day and became one of the major festivals in China. This is also the second largest traditional festival in China after the Spring Festival.