As an editor and publisher, Ye is known for his
Shuangmei jing’an congshu (; literally
Shadow of the Double Plum Tree Anthology), which collects four Chinese medical classics on sexual cultivation that had been partially preserved in the
Ishinpō: the
Sunü jing;
Yufang mijue;
Yufang zhiyao; and
Dongxuan zi. First published in 1907, Ye's anthology "outraged" the Chinese public, although it was later described in the 1950s by
Joseph Needham as "the greatest Chinese sexological collection". Ye was one of the most prolific collectors of rare books and manuscripts in China. In 1910, he published a guide to book-collecting and in 1915, he released a catalogue of the 350,000-odd volumes in his personal collection. Ye also occasionally tried his hand at prose and poetry. ==Views==