It's not a proverb, but a quotation from a play by Shakespeare called "All's Well That Ends Well". In this play the heroine Helena is having a tough time but she says, "All's well that ends well; still the fine's the crown; whate'er the course, the end is the renown." which may be freely paraphrased as "It's ok as long as it ends well; the finish is still the crowning moment; it doesn't matter how you get there, because it is the end that matters."
In all of Shakespeare's works, "marry" can mean two things. First, it can mean just what you think it means: to enter into a marriage with someone. This is what it means when the Countess Rousillion says "Tell me thy reason why thou wilt marry?" or when the King of France says, "I wonder, sir, sith wives are monsters to you, and that you fly them as you swear them Lordship, yet you desire to marry."
"Marry" was also a mild oath, based on the name of the Virgin Mary. This is the meaning when Parolles says "it looks ill, it eats drily, marry, 'tis a withered pear" or when the Clown says, "Marry, you are the wiser man; for many a man's tongue shakes out his master's undoing."
It's pretty easy to tell which is which.
The Merchant Venice and King Lear All's Well That Ends Well
The play makes use of "the bed-trick", a device where a male character is invited to meet a young woman in her bed in the dark, but when he gets there another woman has been substituted in her place without him knowing it.
All's Well That Ends Well - 1913 is rated/received certificates of: UK:U
It is both. In the division of all of Shakespeare's plays into Histories, Comedies and Tragedies, All's Well is categorized with the comedies. And in fact, the play ends with Helena and Bertram being reconciled and set to enjoy a happy marital life. At least that is how it appears on the surface. It is difficult to know how sincere Bertram's enthusiasm is for the marriage. It is this doubt that makes some people call it a problem play.
All of Shakespeare's comedies had happy endings - usually with the marriage of unmarried characters, and a lighthearted style to the entire play. Some plays which do not end in marriages are All's Well that Ends Well and Love's Labour's Lost. Some plays which do not have a lighthearted style are All's Well that Ends Well and Measure for Measure.comedies with happy endings:All's Well That Ends WellAs You Like ItThe Comedy of ErrorsCymbelineLove's Labour's LostMeasure for MeasureThe Merchant of VeniceThe Merry Wives of WindsorA Midsummer Night's DreamMuch Ado About NothingPericles Prince of TyreTaming of the ShrewThe TempestTwelfth NightThe Two Gentlemen of VeronaThe Winter's Tale
Alls Well That Ends Well - 2007 was released on: USA: 16 January 2007 (DVD premiere)
The cast of Alls Well That Ends Well - 2007 includes: Penny Marshall as herself Michael Piscitelli as J. Castro Ricco Ross as Billy Shakes Jeff Sable as Patron
It means that if things end up okay, then the whole thing is okay.
So they say...
Alls Well That Ends Well. It's kind of like when you abbriviate something, if the word is less then 3 letters then you don't add the word to the abbriviation, in you'r case though you go to the next word.
It was a common proverb before it became the title of a play by Shakespeare.
The Merchant Venice and King Lear All's Well That Ends Well
If you mean by adding more details then I strongly suggest you lease well alone, you may alter the whole meaning of the proverb. My suggestion is to fully understand what the writer is saying. There may be symbolic meanings in the work that need to be understood. Certain phrasings may need to be comprehended, for what was meant when the proverb was written may not mean the same thing today. Who is the proverb talking to and does it apply to you.
The play makes use of "the bed-trick", a device where a male character is invited to meet a young woman in her bed in the dark, but when he gets there another woman has been substituted in her place without him knowing it.
It means that if things end up okay, then the whole thing is okay.
It means that if things end up okay, then the whole thing is okay.
Though it does not necessarily show that there is value in familiarity. the most well-known proverb is "Familiarity breeds contempt."