Walpole, New Hampshire, the longtime home of the Knapp family, would become the home for the Faxons a few months after this diary entry. Adeline had just spent the previous summer there. See also the epilogue for more information.
The Vale of Cedars
The Vale of Cedars; or, The Martyr by Grace Aguilar. Wikipedia writes:
Grace Aguilar (1816 -1847) was an English novelist, poet and writer on Jewish history and religion. Although she had been writing since childhood, much of her work was published posthumously. Among those are her best known works, the novels Home Influence and A Mother's Recompense.
Aguilar's debut was an anonymous collection of poems, The Magic Wreath of Hidden Flowers. Three years later she translated Isaac Orobio de Castro's Israel Defended into English at her father's behest. Later her The Spirit of Judaism drew interest and sales in both Britain and the United States after being published in Philadelphia by Isaac Leeser. He added a preface to the work elucidating his differences with her, the first of many clashes her work would have with mainstream Jewish thought.
In the 1840s her novels began to attract regular readers, and Aguilar moved back to London with her parents. Despite her success, she and her mother still had to operate a boys' Hebrew school to stay solvent, which she resented for the time and energy it took from her writing. In 1847, she became ill again with a spinal paralysis which she did not let prevent her from visiting her brother in Frankfurt. Her health worsened and she died there that September.
Orthodox Church
The Orthodox Church at the time was the Harvard Congregational Church, aka the Bethany Sunday School, built in 1844 on Washington St. facing the mouth of Cypress St.