Story of the Big Front Door, by 
Mary Finley Leonard 
 
Project Gutenberg's The Story of the Big Front Door, by Mary Finley 
Leonard This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and 
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Title: The Story of the Big Front Door 
Author: Mary Finley Leonard 
Release Date: September 20, 2006 [EBook #19340] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
STORY OF THE BIG FRONT DOOR *** 
 
Produced by David Garcia, Jeannie Howse and the Online Distributed 
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced 
from images generously made available by The Kentuckiana Digital 
Library) 
 
* * * * *
+--------------------------------------------------------------+ | Transcriber's 
Note: | | | | Inconsistent hyphenation in the original document has been | 
| preserved. | | | +--------------------------------------------------------------+ 
* * * * * 
[Illustration: "THEY HAD DRAWN THEIR CHAIRS TOGETHER IN 
A COSEY GROUP."] 
 
THE STORY OF THE BIG FRONT DOOR 
 
BY MARY F. LEONARD 
"THEY HELPED EVERY ONE HIS NEIGHBOR." 
 
NEW YORK: 46 EAST FOURTEENTH STREET THOMAS Y. 
CROWELL & COMPANY BOSTON: 100 PURCHASE STREET 
 
COPYRIGHT, 1898, BY THOMAS Y. CROWELL & COMPANY. 
 
CONTENTS. 
CHAPTER PAGE 
I. THE OUTLAWS 1 
II. IN THE STAR CHAMBER 12 
III. THE LADY OF THE BROWN HOUSE 20 
IV. DORA 31
V. UNCLE WILLIAM 51 
VI. THE MAGIC DOOR 59 
VII. IKEY'S ACCIDENT 65 
VIII. THE M.KS. 74 
IX. A RIVAL CLUB 84 
X. GOOD NEIGHBORS 93 
XI. PLANS 103 
XII. CEDAR AND HOLLY 112 
XIII. THE HARP MAN'S BENEFIT 127 
XIV. CLOUDS 140 
XV. DORA'S BRIGHT IDEA 156 
XVI. SILVER KEYS 165 
XVII. A PRISONER 172 
XVIII. SOMETHING ELSE HAPPENS 183 
XIX. AUNT SUKEY'S STORY 190 
XX. THE ORDER OF THE BIG FRONT DOOR 198 
XXI. WORK AND PLAY 206 
XXII. UNCLE WILLIAM IS SURPRISED 219 
XXIII. JIM 230 
XXIV. A DISAPPOINTMENT 238
XXV. AUNT ZÉLIE 246 
XXVI. THE BIG FRONT DOOR IS LEFT ALONE 255 
 
THE STORY 
OF 
THE BIG FRONT DOOR. 
CHAPTER I. 
THE OUTLAWS. 
"Come listen to me, ye gallants so free, All ye who love mirth for to 
hear; And I will tell you of a bold outlaw Who lived in 
Nottinghamshire." 
Old Ballad. 
Ikey Ford was the first to make the discovery, and he lost no time in 
carrying the news to the others. 
Great was their consternation! 
"Moving into the Brown house? Nonsense, Ikey, you are making it up!" 
Carl exclaimed. 
"What shall we do about the banquet for King Richard?" cried Bess, 
sitting down on the doorstep despairingly. 
"And my racket is over there, and your grandma's fur rug, Ikey Ford!" 
wailed Louise, shaking her finger at the bringer of evil tidings. He 
assented meekly, adding, "and Sallie's clothes-pins." 
A stranger might have been puzzled to guess what sort of calamity had 
befallen the little group in the doorway of the pleasant,
hospitable-looking house among the maple trees, that warm August 
morning. Something serious certainly, for Louise's dimples had 
disappeared, Bess was almost tearful, and the boys, though they 
affected to take it more lightly, wore plainly depressed. 
"Let's go over to Ikey's and look through the fence," suggested Carl, 
and, as there seemed nothing else to do, the others agreed. 
They filed solemnly down the walk and across the street,--Bess with a 
roll of green cambric under her arm,--and nobody uttered a word till a 
secluded spot behind Mrs. Ford's syringa bushes was reached, where, 
through an opening in the division fence, they could look out 
unobserved upon the adjoining house. 
"The side windows are open!" Louise announced in a tragic whisper. 
"Didn't I tell you so?" replied Ikey with mournful triumph. 
It was a small house with a pointed roof, and it stood in the midst of an 
old-fashioned garden, where for years and years lilacs and snowballs, 
peonies and roses, pinks and sweet-william, and dozens of other 
flowers, had bloomed happily in their season, without any trouble to 
anybody. In the background sunflowers and hollyhocks grew, and on 
either side of the front gate two stout little cedars stood like sentinels 
on guard. The street upon which this gate opened was wide and shady, 
and the bustle and din of the city had not yet invaded its quiet. 
Though in reality a red house grown somewhat rusty, it was called the 
"Brown house," because as far back as any one in the neighborhood 
could remember it had been occupied by an old lady of that name. For 
years before she died she was bed-ridden, and to the children there was 
something mysterious about this person who was never seen, but on 
whose    
    
		
	
	
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