Page:Henry Adams' History of the United States Vol. 2.djvu/305

286 of State a formal letter, repeating what had already been said to Pinckney at Madrid. Madison's reply was studiously moderate and conciliatory. He explained as best he could the offensive language of the Mobile Act, and announced that a special minister would soon reach Madrid, to hasten the adjustment of all territorial disputes; he deprecated the demand for an abandonment of the French claims, and argued that such a condition of ratification was not supported by international law; he urged Yrujo to give assurances of an unqualified ratification, but he said not a word about Pinckney's performances, and gave it to be understood that Pinckney would be recalled. A few days afterward he wrote to Monroe, ordering him in haste to Spain. "The turn which our affairs at Madrid have taken renders it expedient in the judgment of the President that you should proceed thither without delay." In another letter, written at nearly the same time, he was more explicit: —


 * "Pinckney's recall has been asked by the Spanish government, and a letter of leave goes to him. I suspect he will not return in good humor.  I could not permit myself to flatter him, and truth would permit me to praise him.  He is well off in escaping reproof, for his agency has been very faulty as well as feeble."