Zhōu Yīng 周瑛 (1430–1518), zì Liángshí 梁石, self-styled Méngzhōngzǐ 蒙中子, also Cuìqú 翠渠, of Pútián 莆田 (Xīnghuà, Fújiàn). Chénghuà 5 / jǐchǒu (1469) jìnshì; rose to Sìchuān yòu bùzhèngshǐ 四川右布政使. Míngshǐ Rúlín zhuàn. His writings — known under the Cuìqú lèigǎo 翠渠類稿 (full text) — survive in the Sìkù through his disciple Lín Jìnlóng 林近龍’s selection Cuìqú zhāigǎo in 7 juǎn + 1 juǎn bǔyí (KR4e0130). Status as Chén Xiànzhāng (陳獻章) disciple is contested: Zhāng Xǔ 張詡’s funerary biography for Chén lists Zhōu among his students, but Zhōu’s 8th-generation descendant Chéng 成 (Yōngzhèng era) forcefully denied this on textual evidence from the two men’s collected works; the Sìkù concludes that the two were shǐ hé ér zhōng kuí — “originally joined and then estranged”. Famous for his Lǚshuāng cāo 履霜操 yuèfǔ (Frost-Walking Lament) — praised by Zhū Yízūn, Shěn Déqián, and Zhèng Wángchén as correcting Hán Yù’s failure in the Lǚshuāngcāo line. CBDB id 34575, 1430–1518.