Yuán-dynasty poet and recluse of Dōngyáng 東陽 (Wùzhōu 婺州, modern Zhèjiāng). Style-name Jūcǎi 居采, sobriquet Lùpí zǐ 鹿皮子 (“Deerskin Master”) from his habit of dressing in deerskin while living in seclusion at Yúngǔ 圁谷. Repeatedly recommended for office, he declined and devoted himself to writing. He was a contemporary of the major Wùzhōu literati Huáng Jìn 黃溍 and Sòng Lián 宋濂, with whom he sharpened his prose; he was notably learned in the Classics (shuōjīng). His Lùpí zǐ jí 鹿皮子集 (KR4d0547) is the only collection that has come down. His Old-style five-character verse and seven-character regulated verse are the most admired; the Sìkù tíyào notes his seven-character regulated style follows Lù Guīméng 陸龜蒙 and Wēn Tíngyún 溫庭筠. Some of his pieces date from after the Yuán fell, and use the Hóngwǔ zhèngyùn 洪武正韻 rather than older rhyme tables, indicating composition under the early Míng.