No problem. Out of curiosity, with the Classics major, I take it you are doing/have done Ancient Greek and Latin. If so, which did you enjoy more? And was the first year textbook for Latin intuitive (in the sense that everything needed to learn beginners Latin was contained in the textbook)?
I have done all the Latin and Greek subjects at Melb Uni. I thought Greek was better taught (also smaller class sizes/better topics/) but had more work, especially once you get into second and third year (first year Greek/Latin isn't so good - the grammar you learn is so basic). To get any advantage out of either subject, you really need to do everything up to the third year subjects (i.e to start reading with real fluency).
The work load for both is really intense as far as arts subjects go. I especially recall heaps of tests/memorisation for Greek in second and third year; each week you would have to memorise the past week's passages and do a test on them plus an unseen. Something to keep in mind is that in Greek a huge portion of your mark in the later two years is also taken from unseens (so you can't really 'study' for it in a specific way); but in Latin unseens don't take up anywhere near so great a portion of the mark (most of the mark is taken from assignments/memorising the set text).
Whether one is better than the other is entirely subjective. All I can say is that if you want to learn to read useful/inspiring things, do Greek (so much more great literature written in Greek, e.g. Plato, Sophocles, Thucydides, Pindar etc.); whereas in Latin you tend to end up reading rhetoric and poetry at Melb (Cicero, Ovid etc). Also most of the Latin authors copied from Greek literature; and Latin is itself a more basic version of Ancient Greek (i.e the grammar is taken from Greek). The best thing is to do both to a high level; then you can read all the literature and scholarship with confidence. They really complement each other. How can I put this better? I would say that I have personally profited more from reading Greek literature (i.e far more 'wow' moments), than from reading the Latin authors. But to study anything properly in the ancient world, you really need both to a high level.
Oh, and in Greek you learn three different dialects: Homeric, Ionic, and Attic Greek. Which is cool
