Chén Tài 陳泰 (Yuán, fl. early-mid 14th c.), zì Zhìtóng 志同, biéhào Suǒān 所安, native of Chálíng 茶陵 (Chángshā). Recommended together with Ōuyáng Xuán 歐陽玄 in their home prefecture on the strength of his Tiānmǎ fù, the examiner’s píngyǔ — preserved at the head of the Suǒān yíjí KR4d0506 — running “qìgǔ cānggǔ, yīnjié yōurán: tiānmén dòngkāi, tiānmǎ kěyǐ zìjiàn yǐ” (“airy and ancient, the metre suspended in the air: heaven’s gate opens, the heaven-horse will show itself”). Yányòu 2 (1315) jìnshì, the same year as Ōuyáng Xuán. Appointed Lóngquán xiàn zhǔbù; “qīchí bóhuàn” (lingered in modest office), self-soothing only by yínyǒng (poetic composition); died in office without rising. His yíjí was first assembled by his great-grandson Pǔ 朴 and re-printed by his láisūn (4-generation-down descendant) Quán 銓 et al. in the Chénghuà era; the juǎn-end jiùtí records “hòuduàn dùsǔn xī zāi” — meaning Pǔ’s transmission was already incomplete.