Page:Henry Adams' History of the United States Vol. 2.djvu/306

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1804.
PINCKNEY'S DIPLOMACY.
287

The first attempts to overawe Spain had failed. Pinckney, not disavowed but ignored, fell into the background; and once more Monroe stepped forward to rescue the Administration. When these instructions were written, he had already reached Paris on his way to Madrid; but Madison, undeterred by Pinckney's disaster, still persisted in advising him to place his main reliance "in a skilful appeal to the fears of Spain."[1]

  1. Madison to Monroe, Nov. 9, 1804; Works, ii. 208.