4 FEBRUARY 1832, Page 6

Clic Court.

find from the Court Circular, that the King and the Queen have enjoyed their daily drives during the week; we therefore conclude that his Majesty continues well, and that his Royal partner has recovered from the slight indisposition under which she had laboured for some weeks past. The King comes to London on Monday, we believe for the sole purpose of receiving the Recorder's report; he will return to the Pavilion, if time permit, in the evening. The John Bull has been reviving an old Story of a coming heir to the throne. This Tory paein to "non-existents and impossibles," is of a part with their other proceedings. They seek to invest the highest subject in the realm with adventitious claims to general sympathy, not because they love or care for her, but because they would make her subservient to their party politics. It won't do. There is no Pollio coming to cheer their hopes; and if there were, we must not give up Sarum even to the longing of a Queen. Lord John Russell and Lord Holland were at the Pavilion on Monday night. Lord Londonderry and others have also had inter- views with the King dining the week, to present little Anti-Reform petitions. The Court chronicler omits these things : this is wrong-- he has but one task to perform, and that is to tell facts: the public can draw what inferences they please.