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・ The Enterprise-Tocsin
・ The Entertainer
・ The Entertainer (Alesha Dixon album)
・ The Entertainer (D'banj album)
・ The Entertainer (discount publisher)
・ The Entertainer (film)
・ The Entertainer (Garth Brooks video album)
・ The Entertainer (play)
・ The Entertainer (rag)
・ The Entertainer (retailer)
・ The Entertainer (song)
・ The Entertainer (The Belle Stars song)
・ The Entertainers
・ The Entertainment and Arts
・ The Entertainment at Althorp
The Entertainment at Britain's Burse
・ The Entertainment Capital of the World
・ The Entertainment Herald
・ The Entertainment Quarter
・ The Enthusiasts
・ The Entire City
・ The Entire History of You
・ The Entire Population of Hackney
・ The Entitled
・ The Entity
・ The Entity (2015 film)
・ The Entity (album)
・ The Entity (comics)
・ The Entity (disambiguation)
・ The Entity (short story)


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The Entertainment at Britain's Burse : ウィキペディア英語版
The Entertainment at Britain's Burse

''The Entertainment at Britain’s Burse'' is a newly discovered masque (kind of play) written by Ben Jonson in 1609 and commissioned by Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury, in celebration of the opening of the “New Exchange” (essentially a shopping mall). This masque was discovered by James Knowles and published in 1997. It is an unusual Johnson text because it seems to be in celebration of consumer culture while so many of his other plays and poems condemn it—though there might be some satire intended. There are essentially only three characters. Each character performs a rather lengthy monologue including two songs by the final actor.
The masque begins with “The Key Keeper” who welcomes a “Maiestie” and “roiall lady” assumed to be the king (James I) and the queen to the New Exchange. The Key Keeper describes the exchange like a “newe region,” a place still foreign to himself containing many unexplored wonders. Then a “Shop Boy” describes all the many things for sell beginning and ending his speech asking “what doe you lacke?” Then “The Master”—the owner of the shop—picks up where the shop-boy left off. He describes the many “mysterious” commodities and his adventures acquiring them. The play concludes with the master desiring wealth, saying, “And god make me Rich, which is the sellers prayer.”
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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