HOME AT THE HAVEN. battle of St. Vincent, or Trafalgar; and if Lucy did try to understand how it was, she was sure to make a blunder, and get confused about the English and French ships, fancying perhaps all the time that the sugar-basin had been on the French side, when it had been fixed on for Nelson's ship. All this made Lucy much more silent at the Haven than she had ever bench before in her life, so that Uncle Osborne had no op- portunity of calling' her a chatr ox arleain, as he did i in the railroad carriage. To tell the truth, her uncle did n take much notice of Lucy in any kind of way, unless it was to ask her every day how she got on with her sewing," which he seemed to think the only thing she had anything to do with; and when he found out that she had never learned to mark, he used to teaze her a little about it, always asking her when to feaze her a little about it, always asking her wher