versewright
/ˈvɜː(ɹ)s.ɹaɪt/
versewright means A poet. Lexicurio rates it Rare gem — a strength score of 83 out of 100.
versewright is pronounced /ˈvɜː(ɹ)s.ɹaɪt/.
Why “versewright” is a great word
VERSEWRIGHT — [Noun] A maker or composer of verse; a poet. From the English 'verse' (a line of metrical writing) + the archaic agent noun suffix '-wright' (a maker or builder). Unlike 'poet,' which evokes an inspired visionary, or 'wordsmith,' a versatile artisan of prose, a versewright is a precise architect of metrical form. It is the patient chisel-work of fitting syllable to meter, the deliberate mortaring of rhyme into a sonnet's wall, and the careful jointing of a couplet—a humble acknowledgment that poetry is built, not merely born, brick by measured brick.
Etymology
From verse + wright.