Wáng Gōng 王恭 (c. 1340?–after 1406), zì Ānzhōng 安中, self-styled Jiēshān qiáo zhě 皆山樵者 (“Woodcutter Where Mountains Are All Around”), native of Mǐnxiàn 閩縣 (Fúzhōu, Fújiàn). One of the Mǐnzhōng Shízǐ 閩中十才子 led by 林鴻 Lín Hóng. Lived in pre-Yǒng-lè years in retirement in the Fújiàn mountains as the Jiēshān qiáo zhě; summoned in Yǒnglè 4 (1406) in commoner’s clothes as a rúshì to compile the Yǒnglè dàdiǎn 永樂大典; granted the post of Hànlínyuàn diǎnjí 翰林院典籍. Lín Huán 林環 (the 1406 zhuàngyuán) described Wáng on his arrival at the Hànlín as shén qīng tǐ qú, xūbìn rú xuě, géjīn yěfú — implying advanced age, hence birth in the 1330s or early 1340s. Wáng resigned after a short period of service and returned home. His record is appended in Míng shǐ Wényuàn zhuàn to Lín Hóng’s biography. Three verse collections: pre-service KR4e0045 Báiyún qiáochàng jí 白雲樵唱集 and KR4e0046 Cǎozé kuánggē 草澤狂歌; post-service Fèngtái qīngxiào 鳳臺清嘯 (lost). The Sìkù editors place Wáng’s géyùn (style and resonance) above his fellow Shízǐ figure Gāo Bǐng 高棅, against the conventional ranking that had Gāo third and Wáng fourth.