Wáng Lìng 王令 (1032–1059), originally zì Qīnměi 欽美, later changed by Wáng Cuì 王萃 to Féngyuán 逢原 (under which he is mostly known). Of Yuánchéng 元城 (Héběi) — followed his great-uncle Wáng Yǐ 王乙 to Guǎnglíng 廣陵 (Yángzhōu) and is therefore Yáng-zhōu-based. Died at age 28, leaving a posthumous daughter (the wife of Wú Shīlǐ 吳師禮, mother of Wú Shuō 吳說). Wáng Ānshí 王安石 王安石, at exceedingly few of his own contemporaries’ high estimation, particularly esteemed Wáng Lìng — gave him his wife’s younger sister Wúshì 吳氏 in marriage; the Wáng Ānshí zèngdá and jìwén corpus contains many pieces to and about Wáng Lìng. Liú Bēi 劉敞, etc., likewise highly esteemed him. His verse is pángbó àoyǎn (vast-flowing, profound-elaborated), generally taking Hán Yù 韓愈 as the principal model but moving in and out of Lú Tóng 盧仝, Lǐ Hè 李賀, Mèng Jiāo 孟郊. Liú Kèzhuāng’s Hòucūn shīhuà praised his Shǔhàn kǔrè poem as having gǔlì lǎocāng, shídù gāoyuǎn (firm-strong-old, judgment lofty-far); also praised his Fùgōng bìngménrén xiāngdá, Sūn Shēnlǎo wényàn and other pieces. His gǔwén (e.g. the Xìng shuō) likewise self-stand a school. The collection Guǎnglíng jí 廣陵集 KR4d0075 in 31 juǎn — 18 juǎn shīfù + 12 juǎn wén + 1 juǎn shíyí — was edited by his grandson (in fact great-grandson via his posthumous daughter) Wáng Shuō 王說.