The Collaborative International Dictionary
Sucket \Suck"et\, n. [Cf. Suck, v. t., Succades.]
A sweetmeat; a dainty morsel.
--Jer. Taylor.
Wiktionary
n. A candied sweetmeat
Usage examples of "sucket".
In those days, when sugar was a costly commodity, a sucket was more esteemed than now.
To entertain Strangers Marmalade, Suckets, Almonds, Comfits and such like.
The tentacle twitched and the pad coated with scarlet suckets slapped down where Relkin had been standing the moment before.
In such cases also jellies of all colours, mixed with a variety in the representation of sundry flowers, herbs, trees, forms of beasts, fish, fowls, and fruits, and thereunto marchpane wrought with no small curiosity, tarts of divers hues, and sundry denominations, conserves of old fruits, foreign and home-bred, suckets, codinacs, marmalades, marchpane, sugar-bread, gingerbread, florentines, wild fowls, venison of all sorts, and sundry outlandish confections, altogether seasoned with sugar (which Pliny calleth mel ex arundinibus, a device not common nor greatly used in old time at the table, but only in medicine, although it grew in Arabia, India, and Sicilia), do generally bear the sway, besides infinite devices of our own not possible for me to remember.