Péng Sūnyí 彭孫貽 (1615–1673), Zhòngmóu 仲謀, hào Yìrén 羿仁, sīshì (private posthumous title given by disciples) Xiàojièxiānshēng 孝介先生. Native of Hǎiyán 海鹽, Zhèjiāng. Major Míng-loyalist (yímín 遺民) poet and historiographer. Second son of the Míng martyr 彭期生 Péng Qíshēng (the Tàipúgōng 太僕公, who died fighting Qīng forces in Jiāngxī in 1645); two younger brothers 彭麐孫 Péng Línsūn and Péng Zǐyǔ also died with their father. After the Míng fall Péng went on foot through warfare to retrieve his father’s bones; thereafter lived as a recluse, refused all Qīng official summons, supported his mother on a vegetable diet for the rest of his life. Disciple-in-spirit of 陳子龍 Chén Zǐlóng, who in 1642 had recommended him as a metropolitan-exam top candidate (Péng fell ill and could not complete). His major historiographical work, the Liúkòu zhì 流寇志 (also Píngkòu zhì 平寇志, 12 juan) — the principal contemporary chronicle of the Lǐ Zìchéng and Zhāng Xiànzhōng rebellions — was submitted to the Qīng Míng shǐ compilation board by 黃宗羲 Huáng Zōngxī in his stead. The Míngzhāi jí KR4f0069 (23 juan) preserves his collected poetry and prose, including the celebrated Bǎihuā shī 百花詩 (Hundred-Flowers Poems) and the Lǐngshàng yín 嶺上吟 lament-cycle on his father’s martyrdom. A formal biography by 王士禎 Wáng Shìzhēn (the Yúyángshānrén) is preserved in the SBCK volume’s front matter. ECCP 614 (Tu Lien-che); CBDB id 65711.