| ALLS | ___ Well That Ends Well (Shakespeare play) |
| THAT | "All's Well ___ Ends Well" (Shakespeare play) |
| ENDS | 'All's Well That ___ Well', Shakespeare play (4) |
| STAR | 'That I should think to love a bright particular ___/And think to wed it' (Shakespeare All's Well That Ends Well (1603-4) (4) |
| LAFEU | An old lord in Shakespeare's play All's Well That Ends Well |
| PAROLLES | Follower of Bertram in William Shakespeare play All's Well That Ends Well (8) |
| HELENA | Heroine of the Shakespeare play All's Well that Ends Well (6) |
| ACTFIVE | When "All's Well That Ends Well" ends |
| COMEDY | From "festive drama" and "village song", word for a narrative poem with a pleasant ending originally, later a light amusing "all's well that ends well"-style drama or play; or, funny business, hilarit |
| EER | "This is the first truth that ___ thine own tongue was guilty of": "All's Well That Ends Well" |
| BERTRAM | "All's Well That Ends Well" count |
| ELS | Pair seen three times in "All's Well That Ends Well" |
| DOWRONGTONONE | "Love all, trust a few, ____" (All's Well That Ends Well) |
| ERE | "End ___ I do begin" - All's Well That Ends Well |
| ISHE | "Why ___ melancholy?" ("All's Well That Ends Well" line) (2 wds.) |
| IDEALIST | "Sometimes people call me an ____. Well, that is the way I know I am an American" (Woodrow Wilson) |
| OFT | "Our remedies __ in ourselves do lie": "All's Well That Ends Well" |
| SUCCESSSTORY | It's no failure to read this as a tale where all's well that ends well (7,5) |
| PLAY | "I ____ the noble housewife with the time, to entertain it so merrily with a fool" (All's Well That Ends Well) |
| APOSTROPHE | Character in "All's Well That Ends Well" and "A Midsummer Night's Dream" |