In Peel's view, true talent should not be focused on studying how to garner votes.
However, Peel couldn't help but laugh secretly when he saw the former High Chancellor Lord Lyndhurst caring for Disraeli so much, treating him as his favorite pupil.
After all, from some perspective, Disraeli's friend Arthur is also a top student of another former High Chancellor, Lord Brougham.
What's more amusing is that Lyndhurst and Brougham were extremely at odds with each other.
In the divorce case between George IV and Queen Caroline, Brougham appeared as the Queen's defense lawyer, while Lyndhurst, the then Deputy Attorney General of Britain, opposed him as the King's defense lawyer.
Both made a name for themselves through this case, laying the foundation for their future appointments as High Chancellor, but they also became rivals because of it.
