Southern-Sòng cí-writer (fl. Qìngyuán–Jiādìng, c. 1190–1226); zì Bīnwáng 賓王, hào Zhúwū 竹屋 (“Bamboo Cottage”), of Shānyīn 山陰 (Shàoxīng, Zhèjiāng). Close chángchóu friend of Shǐ Dázǔ 史達祖. Together with Shǐ, conventionally placed by Zhāng Yán 張炎’s Cí yuán and the modern Báishí (姜夔-line) prosodic-school tradition as the two foremost late-prosodic-school cí-writers: “cí-grade out of the ordinary, jùfǎ outstanding-different, all able to stand independent of clear-new meaning, cutting out the soft-and-lush.” His sole surviving work is the Zhúwū chīyǔ KR4j0051 in one juǎn, preserving around 110 cí; original prefaces by Chén Zào 陳造 of Gāoyóu and Shǐ Dázǔ (the latter no longer in the parent collection). The SòngYuán placement of the GāoShǐ pair as the principal late-Bái-shí writers was taken up by the late-Qīng Zhèpài cí revival (Zhū Yízūn 朱彝尊 and others) as a foundational object of imitation.