The Collaborative International Dictionary
Romancist \Ro*man"cist\, n. A romancer. [R.]
Wiktionary
n. (context archaic English) One who romances; a romancer or romanticist.
Usage examples of "romancist".
On he jogged steadily, and by and by began to be entertained by his own thoughts as pleasantly as a poet or romancist is entertained by the fancies which come and go in the brain with all the vividness of dramatic reality.
The fact is that I object to being regarded as a mere romancist, even as a dead-head speculator, or dilettante reporter, of the drama of life.
The massacre of September is one of the most lurid events of the Revolution, easier therefore for the romancist to deal with than for the historian.
Let writers of fiction assume that the public knows there are foul things, and needs not to be reminded of them, and let the romancist avoid them as he would a land of lepers.
But in Germany, poets, romancists, and scientific men write almost as many works connected with religious questions as on topics within their own chosen vocation.
The world would call them romancists, if they believed that this restraint could be.