Cén Ānqīng 岑安卿 (1286–1355; catalog meta), Jìngnéng 靜能, hào Kǎolǎo shānrén 栲栳山人 (from the Kǎolǎofēng near his home). Native of Yúyáo 餘姚 (Shàoxīnglù, Zhèjiāng). Zhìxíng gāojié (virtuous and lofty), spent his life in qióngè (poverty and adversity), without office. His verse-line “lǎochéng kuì gǒudé — tóngzhì xiū wúguān” (“the old and ripe are ashamed of gain by chance — the young and ardent are ashamed of having no office”) is the standard self-characterization. The Sànāi shī — eulogizing three Sòng-loyalist neighbors (Lì Yuánjí 厲元吉, Gāo Shīlǔ 高師魯, Lǐ Tiānxī 李天錫) — has been controversially read by Gù Sìlì as sīSòng (longing-for-Sòng) sentiment, but the Sìkù tíyào carefully shows the Chūmén ǒufù shī line “cè wén cháotíng yíyì zhēng — Jíxián zhùzuò kōng yíngtíng — Zhōngshūtáng shàng rì yángfàn — Shìzǔ shānhé rú dǐ píng” — Cén’s actual posture is jiàn Yuánzhèng jiànchí — wéntián wǔxī — fāng shēn yǐ guóshì wéi yōu, not nostalgia for the Sòng. Edited by his fellow-town Sòng Xǐ 宋禧 (originally 元禧 Yuánxǐ, Hóng-wǔ-summoned for the Yuánshǐ compilation).