This poem was written in Chang'an in the spring of the third year of Dazhong (849). This poem is a poem of depression, describing that he was poor in his official career, wandering with no fixed abode, had no close friends despite his talent, and no one understood his thoughts. The whole poem sings about objects and expresses emotions, using the wandering oriole to describe itself and express the feeling of life experience. "Li Yishan's Poetry Interpretation" written by Lu Kunzeng of the Qing Dynasty said: "The author hurt himself and drifted, with no place to turn to. He specially asked the wandering oriole to sigh in his ears. Crossing the road and facing the current is a metaphor for Dongchuan and Lingbiao. He can't help himself." The style of this poem is light and elegant, and the emotion is profound. Zhang's "Hui Jian" said: "The thoughts are lingering, unique between the present and the past."
The first couplet of this poem uses Huang Ying's helplessness to describe her ups and downs in her official career. The chin couplet continues the first couplet. The couplet is a metaphor for one's own aspirations and disappointment. The neck couplet changes its direction, using the scene of Huang Ying singing despite the hardships as a metaphor for her persistent spiritual pursuit, and the contrast is neat. The tail couplet succeeds the neck couplet, using the oriole's nowhere to go as a metaphor for its own situation. The whole poem empathizes with things, the emotions are sad, the meaning is profound, and the style is desolate.