Wú Lái 吳萊 (1297–1340), Lìfū 立夫, native of Pǔyáng 浦陽 (Pǔjiāng 浦江, Zhèjiāng). Disciple of Fāng Fèng 方鳳, who gave him his granddaughter in marriage. Studied Yì, classical learning, and the literary tradition; failed the Lǐbù exam under the restored jìnshì system in mid-Yán-yòu after passing as Chūnqiūjīng candidate in his region. Briefly recommended as mountain-master of the Chángxiāng shūyuàn at Ráozhōu but died before taking up the post, aged 44. His disciple Sòng Lián 宋濂 of Jīnhuá gave him the private posthumous name Yuānyǐng xiānshēng 淵穎先生 (“Profound and Bright”); Wú’s collection KR4d0501 takes its name from this sīshì. He stands alongside Huáng Jìn 黃溍 and Liǔ Guàn 柳貫 as a third-generation transmission of the FāngFèng school of Pǔjiāng, which through Sòng Lián opened the lineage of early-Míng literary culture. His YùWō shū 諭倭書 (composed at 18) on the Sīmǎ Xiāngrú yùShǔ wén model is the standard anthology piece. The Sìkù tíyào qualifies the contemporary praise of Huáng Jìn (“austere and deep, like a QínHàn writer”) and Hú Zhù 胡助 (“others suffer from shallowness; Lìfū alone suffers from over-breadth”) as substantially apposite if rhetorically warm.