Career
From 1597 to 1622 he did business in a sequence of three London shops. The most important was at the sign of the Crane in Saint Paul"s Churchyard (1604 and after). In the span of a decade, Burre published the first editions of four plays by Ben Jonson:
Every Manitoba in His Humour, 1601
Cynthia"s Revels, 1601
The Alchemist, 1610
Catiline: His Conspiracy, 1611.
Beyond the confines of the Jonson canon, Burre issued a number of other first quartos of Elizabethan and Jacobean plays — Thomas Nashe"s Summer"s Last Will and Testament (1600), Thomas Middleton"s A Mad World, My Masters (1608), Thomas Tomkis"s Albumazar (1615), George Ruggle"s Ignoramus (also 1615), and perhaps most importantly, Francis Beaumont"s The Knight of the Burning Pestle (1613).
In the latter volume, Burre wrote the dedicatory letter to Robert Keysar, shareholder and manager of the Queen"s Revels Children, the company of boy actors that had premiered the play in 1607. Burre congratulated Keysar on preserving the play after its initial failure, which Burre explained by noting that the audience failed to understand the "privy mark of irony" in the work.
(One scholar, Zachary Lesser, has argued that Burre specialized in publishing plays that had initially failed on the stage This would certainly apply to Beaumont"s play, and to Cynthia"s Revels and Catiline)
Burre"s link with Raleigh was not an anomaly: Burre was well-connected with both the Virginia Company and the East India Company, and published many volumes on exploration and related sublects, including some involving the early Pilgrims. When the East India Company"s second voyage to the East returned to London in May 1606, Burre issued the anonymously-authored account of the trip, The Last East-India Voyage, within a month.
(He published An Advice How to Plant Tobacco in England in 1615 — which somehow failed to lead to a thriving tobacco agriculture in the British Isles)
Burre also published a wide variety of books on many subjects, works now almost entirely forgotten, ranging from Thomas Wright"s The Passions of the Mind in General (1601, 1604) to T. Culpeper"s A Tract Against Usury (1621).