Gōng Shītài 貢師泰 (1298–1362), Tàifǔ 泰甫, hào Wánzhāi 玩齋, late-life pseudonyms 戾契子 Lìqìzǐ and 喌喌翁 Zhōuzhōuwēng (under his adopted Duānmù surname). Native of Xuānchéng 宣城. By Guózǐshēng passed Zhèjiāng xiāngshì; appointed Tàihézhōu pànguān. Promoted yìngfèng Hànlín wénzì; out as Shàoxīng fǔ tuīguān; re-entered Hànlín; reassigned Xuānwéngé shòujīngláng. Zhìzhèng 14 (1354) promoted Lìbù shìláng; out as Zhèjiāng dūshuǐ yōngtián shǐ; immediately Lǐbù shàngshū; reassigned Píngjiānglù zǒngguǎn. When Zhāng Shìchéng 張士誠 took Píngjiāng (= Sūzhōu), Gōng fled to the sea — and from then assumed his adopted surname Duānmù; JiāngZhè xíngshěng chéngzhì awarded him cānzhī zhèngshì. Zhìzhèng 20 (1360) reassigned Hùbù shàngshū, ordered to direct hǎiyùn; Zhìzhèng 22 (1362) called as Mìshūqīng, died en route. Career in Yuánshǐ j. 187. Famously father Gōng Kuí 貢奎 and master Wú Chéng 吳澄 formed his early intellectual training; later poetic exchange with Yú Jí and Jiē Xīsī 揭傒斯. The Hǎiníng late-life narrative of Lǐ Mò (Jiājìng) — Sòng Lián drinking and Gōng’s suicide by poison — is rejected by the Sìkù tíyào on chronological grounds.