wounder n.
late 15c., agent noun from wound (v.).
Examples from the Web for wounder Historical Examples of wounder
That canyon must be a wounder, and the sea and the misty mountains and the brown hills.
Will Levington Comfort
Indras, as an ant, is the wounder, the biter of the serpent.
Zoological Mythology (Volume II)
Angelo de Gubernatis
I lay a long time just in the wounder of the wounderful free air and rain.
Will Levington Comfort
The wound would not close, and an oracle told Telephus “the wounder shall heal.”
Gilbert Murray
Marko cannot now open his hand, but his wounder was sped to the happy hunting-grounds there and then, as he modestly relates.
The Land of the Black Mountain
Reginald Wyon