The breeze intentionally makes it difficult for me to stay, while the moon unintentionally shines on others. What does this mean?

The breeze intentionally makes it difficult for me to stay, while the moon unintentionally shines on others.

-This is a couplet written by Wang Fuzhi, a great thinker in the late Ming and early Qing Dynasties. When he was 7 1 year-old, officials of the Qing court came to visit the scholar, hoping that he could become an official, no matter how old he was. However, he thought he was a relic of the Ming Dynasty and refused to be an official of the Qing Dynasty, so he had the couplet above: "The breeze deliberately made it difficult to keep me, and the bright moon had no intention of taking care of herself." It means that no matter how good the Qing dynasty is to me, it can't keep my heart; Although the Ming Dynasty has perished, the bright moon in my homeland still shines on me. Wang Fuzhi used this pair of couplets to express his holiday.