^In 1922, Counsellor of the Chilean Embassy in the United States, Carlos Castro Ruiz (later Treasury Minister), noted that Henríquez "appears as the spirit of political freedom when many a secular colonist was still vacillating in breaking off his allegiance to the Spanish king" and "Camilo Henríquez and Martínez de Rosas, Salas and Infante were our Paines, Jeffersons, and Franklins of the Revolution." C. Castro Ruiz (أكتوبر 1922). "Chilean Literature"(JSTOR). Hispania. ج. 5 ع. 4: 197–202. DOI:10.2307/330918. JSTOR:330918.