Late-Yuán literatus and reluctant local instructor of Jīxī 績溪 (Huīzhōu, modern southern Ānhuī). Style-name Dàoyuán 道原; self-styled Zhēnsù xiānsheng 貞素先生 (“Pure-and-Plain Master”) and Huáyáng yìzhě 華陽逸者 (“Recluse of Huáyáng”). In Zhìyuán dīngchǒu (1337) the Jiāngdōng xiànshǐ recruited him as jiàoyù of Guìchí; on completion of term he transferred to Dāntú. In Zhìzhèng gēngyín (1350) he was reposted as Táizhōu lù rúxué zhèng, but with roads cut by warfare he could not take the position and retired to live in the Huáyáng hills. In the early Míng he was repeatedly summoned and refused. Among his named works Gǔdàn gǎo 古淡稿 and Huáyáng jí 華陽集 are lost; only the Jiājìng-era recension Zhēnsùzhāi jí 貞素齋集 (KR4d0558) survives, edited by his great-grandson Shū Xù 舒旭 and his fourth-generation descendant Shū Kǒngzhāo 舒孔昭. His younger brother Shū Yuǎnxùn 舒遠遜 has a poetic remainder Běizhuāng yígǎo 北莊遺稿 attached to the same volume.