EYE
fpoken of, with great credit, by Fabri in bis optics, and is faid to have this peculiar excellence, that it {hews all the ob- jects flat, and not crooked, and takes in a large area, tho" it magnifies extremely much. Phil. Tranf. N°. 40. Eve-Sucker, in natural hiftory, a fmall fea infeS, which is fometimes found fixed by the fnout to the Eyes of fprats ; whence it has received its name,. It is about three inches in length, whereof the head is one quarter part. The body is
e z CL
fomewhat thicker than a hog's bridle, and of a pleafant green
colour. Phil. Tranf. N°. 472. §. 7. EYERY of hawks. See Aery, Cycl. EYESS, a young hawk newly taken out of the neft. See the
articles Faicon and Hawk. EZQUADUITL, a name by which fome authors have diftin-
guilhed the tree from which we have the common dragon's
blood of the (hops, Herntmi. p, 59.
F.