I stole Li Bai's wine. How to write a classic?

I stole Li Bai's wine and tried to drown my sorrows by drinking like Li Bai, but I couldn't taste his feeling of not being drunk for thousands of cups, and I couldn't be a celebrity in the sky under his pen. I couldn't write the same poems as him, and I was hated by him for a long time.

I stole Li Bai's wine, and I only dared to sing it lightly, for fear that the sea breeze would wet my eyes and that the moon would shed sorrow. I couldn't get the wind of the bright moon in exchange for the amazing Tang Dynasty, so I chewed up all my ink to explain my crimes with admiration spanning thousands of years, and realized that people were thinner than yellow flowers after all.

Li Bai (February 28th, 71-December 762) was born in Qinglian Township, Changlong County, Mianzhou. A great romantic poet in the Tang Dynasty, grandson of Liang Wuzhao, King Li Gui IX. ?

Being cheerful and generous, he likes making friends, drinking and writing poems, and is ranked as the "Eight Immortals in Wine". Once appreciated by Li Longji, Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty, he served as a bachelor of Hanlin, gave money back, traveled all over the country, and successively married the granddaughters of Prime Ministers Xu Yushi and Zong Chuke. After Tang Suzong acceded to the throne, he was involved in the Yongwang Rebellion, exiled Yelang, and arrived at Li Yangbing's home in Dangtu County. In the second year of Shang Yuan, he died at the age of sixty-two. ?

He is the author of Li Taibai's Collection, and his representative works include Looking at Lushan Waterfall, it is hard to go, Difficult Road to Shu, Going into Wine, Making a Early Arrival in Baidicheng and so on. Li Bai's Ci and Fu, in terms of its pioneering significance and artistic achievements, enjoys a very lofty position. Later generations are called "Poet Fairy" and "Li Du" with poet Du Fu.