When I heard myself say that I found interest in the legal aspect of Bleak House, I did have regret in my choice. While I knew I didn't have to be bound to the subject, I decided to give it a try and see how I like to analyze this certain and prominent aspect in Bleak House. The book itself offered ample quotes and chapters filled with anecdotes or blunt perspectives of how Dickens viewed government and law in general at the time, which entertained me, to say the least. However, as I was searching for creating a post on the gallery, I had become stumped. I knew I wanted to talk about the Court of Chancery, but the internet was not helping me. Of course, this wasn't the only difficulty I faced. I also struggled through all seventeen chapters of the book, mainly because of its English and language usage. While I could pick up ideas here and there, it was grueling work to understand. I had to search through multiple sites offering insights on the chapters because I could simply not understand most of the material. It did help me improve my reading comprehension skills, and allowed me to understand what exactly was going on within the chapter. The book is set in a time where the structure of society and architecture was drastically different compared to today's modern society and attractions. However, the nineteenth-century sounds like a wonderful time if you were rich or somewhere along the lines. Besides that, everyone else had to work a hundred times harder against a system that actively oppresses it. Overall, it made me feel grateful for the century I live in since I am able to do wonderful things without my social class or gender tying me down.