Spring Couplets
Each Chinese New Year, families in China decorate their front doors
with poetic couplets of calligraphy written with fragrant India ink
and expressing the feeling of life's renewal and the return of spring.
It is said that spring couplets originated from "peach wood charms,"
door gods painted on wood charms in earlier times. During the Five Dynasties
period, Meng Chang inscribed an inspired couplet on a peach slat, beginning
a custom which gradually evolved into today's popular custom of pasting
up spring couplets.
In addition to pasting couplets on both sides and above the main door,
it is also common to hang calligraphic writing of the Chinese characters
for "spring" and "wealth." Some people will even invert these drawings
since the Chinese for "inverted" is a homonym in Chinese for "arrive,"
thus signifying that spring and wealth have arrived.

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