Tang Yin is brilliant and sharp-edged, but young and frustrated. After seeing through the officialdom, he spurned his official career and finally adopted the same lifestyle as many literati in China history: passive seclusion. This poem is a typical example of this idea.
He who sees through the world of mortals is frivolous and arrogant, seemingly free and easy, but vaguely reveals a sense of loneliness that "everyone is drunk and I wake up alone", which shows his deep-seated state of mind of "no talent and no ambition".