Consider the following line from the *Aeneid*, Book VI: >nec credere quivi hunc tantum tibi me discessu ferre dolorem. Context: Aeneas has traveled into the underworld, and bumps into Dido, who Aeneas infers has committed suicide because of his departure. My best literal translation is: "I couldn't believe this, my leaving, to bring unto you such pain," because I think that **me discessu** (for me to leave) stands in apposition with **hunc**. But I'm not sure whether supine verbs can have a subject argument. So, generally, can an ablative clause formed from a supine verb have nouns corresponding to the base verb's subject or object?