Yīng Jú 應璩 (191–252 CE; Xiūlián 休璉) was a Wèi 魏 dynasty poet and official. Native of Rǔnán 汝南 (modern Hénan). Younger brother of Yīng Chǎng 應瑒 (one of the Jiàn’ān Qīzǐ 建安七子). He served as Zhōngshū shìláng 中書侍郎 and Shàngshū 尚書 at the Wèi court. His Bǎiyī shī 百一詩 — wry, allusive social-criticism poems warning against the perils of high office — are his most celebrated works; Zhōng Róng 鍾嶸’s Shīpǐn placed him in the middle grade, noting his lineage from the Shījīng tradition of remonstrance poetry. His collected works, listed as Yīng Xiūlián jí 應休璉集 (10 juǎn) in the Suíshū Jīngjízhì, were lost by the Sòng; a reconstruction survives as KR4b0022. His elder brother Yīng Chǎng 應瑒 was one of the Seven Masters of the Jiàn’ān era.