Zhāng Duānyì 張端義 (b. 1179; fl. 1235–1248; CBDB id 47287), Zhèngfū 正夫, self-styled Quánwēng 荃翁, was a late-Southern-Sòng bǐjì writer of Zhèngzhōu 鄭州 origin, settled at Sūzhōu 蘇州 after the Southern migration. In Duānpíng (1234–1236) he answered an imperial zhào (decree) and submitted three memorials; for wàng yán (forthright speech) he was exiled to Sháozhōu 韶州 (Guǎngdōng). His Guì ěr jí 貴耳集 (KR3j0128) in 3 juàn was composed at Sháozhōu in his exile years, with prefaces dated Chúnyòu 1 (1241), Chúnyòu 4 (1244), and Chúnyòu 8 (1248) — three sequential juàn-prefaces for the three sequential volumes. The title is from the classical contrast guì ěr jiàn mù — “the ear is honoured, the eye despised” (the literatus’s reception of doctrine through the ear and from the past, rather than through the eye and from the present); and the book’s compilation followed the loss of an earlier Duǎn cháng lù 短長錄 destroyed by his wife after his exile. His daughters’ family-tradition affiliation was with the Jiāngxī school of poetics. The Sìkù editors flag him as “essentially a Jiāngxī school poet with a strong taste for political controversy.”