Answer:
Answer below:
Explanation:
It could mean one of two things; the play is talking about a paradise or afterlife beyond death that has nothing earth has conflict and pain wise.
Or that before his passing, he was happy despite all the pain and lived, not to survive, but to take every day as a blessing.
It is either A or B because simile uses like or as to describe something and he isnt doing that and it also isnt a metaphor because he isnt speaking in a way that uses one. There is no pun in it either
The three values I believe Americans hold are the most popular ones stated in our constitution, "life, liberty, and property/pursuit of happiness"
A story from personal experiences
Either cute or pretty as they could be used sarcastically