——————
Yu Ji (1272- 1348), born in Bosheng and Renshou (now Sichuan), was a writer in Yuan Dynasty.
The fifth grandson of Yu, the prime minister of the Southern Song Dynasty, whose father's name is Qiu Huanggang. After the death of Song Dynasty, Yu Ji moved to Chongren in Linchuan (now Jiangxi). Smart since childhood, displaced by war, mother Yang dictated The Analects, Mencius and Zuo Zhuan. In the first year of Dade (1297), Yuan Chengzong went to Dadu, where he was appointed as a professor of Confucianism, and later transferred to the post of minister of less supervision. Injong, compiled for Jixian. When he was literate, he served as a bachelor of books in Kuizhangge. He died in Wenjing.
Calligraphy gained the charm of Jin people; He is also engaged in poetry creation, and is known as the "Four Masters" with Liu Guan, Huang Cheng and Xie Si. His poems, with national consciousness, are as famous as Jess, Fan Yi and Yang Zai, and are also known as one of the four great poets in Yuan Dynasty with Mr. Shao An. The Complete Works of Yu Ji was proofread by close friend Wang Jian and published by Tianjin Ancient Books Publishing House in 2007.