Hú Zhònggōng 胡仲弓 (fl. mid-13th c.), Xītì 希悌 (the Sìkù tíyào reads 希聖 Xīshèng — the variant CBDB 30216 prefers 希悌; both are attested), hào Wěitángkǎn 葦塘戡, was a late-Sòng poet of Qīngyuán 清源 (modern Quánzhōu 泉州, Fújiàn). He passed the jìnshì examination — by the standard date 1244 (Chúnyòu 4), though the catalog meta gives no lifedates; CBDB tags him merely as “S. Song” with an arbitrary “active year” of 1128 deriving from the Hángzhōu / Lín’ān naming change, which is not reliable. He held a county magistracy (the precise post is not preserved), and then a Kuàijī 會稽 (Yuè) position from which he was dismissed shortly after his elderly mother arrived to join him. From that point he travelled freely and wrote what he called mànyóu 漫游 (“loose wandering”) verse. His brother 胡仲參 Hú Zhòngcān (fl. 1240s–60s) was a poet in the same Jiāng-hú-school 江湖派 idiom, with the Zhúzhuāng xiǎo jí 竹莊小集 separately preserved. Compiled works in the Kanripo corpus: KR4d0376 Wěiháng mànyóu gǎo 葦航漫游稿. His verse circulated in his own day partly via Chén Qǐ’s 陳起 Jiānghú hòují 江湖後集, the standard anthology of the late-Sòng HángzhōuFújiàn Jiānghú coterie.