In Kou Zhun's Ode to Huashan, there are a pair of synonyms and antonyms. What are they?

In Kou Zhun's Ode to Huashan, there are a pair of synonyms and antonyms, namely:

Synonym: (look up)-(look back)

Antonyms: (1)-(2)

Original text:

"Singing Flowers"-Author: Kou Zhun Times: Song Dynasty

There is only the sky above, not the mountains and the atmosphere.

Look up at the red sun and look back at the low white clouds.

Only the sky is above, there is nothing higher than this mountain. Looking up is close to the red sun, looking down is the white clouds below.

Extended data:

Kou Zhun has been very clever since he was a child. When I was seven years old, I went to Huashan with my father, leaving "only the sky is above, and there is no mountain harmony." Look up at the red sun and look down at the white clouds.

Kou Zhun was friends with the landscape poets Pan Lang, Ye Wei and Nine Monks in the early Song Dynasty, and his poetic style was similar, so he was also included in the Late Tang School. His thoughts on a winter night and other five laws are sentimental and full of Jia Dao's poems.

His seven-character quatrains have the most lasting appeal, such as "the rustling trees are far away from the forest, and the autumn mountains are half sunset" ("Pavilion Wall on the Shuhe River"). , are all excellent works worth playing. He is not a lyricist, but he writes occasionally, which is quite readable. There are 4 lyrics in Song Ci.

There are 7 volumes in the Collection of Koulaigong, including 3 volumes of Collection of Celebrities in Song Dynasty and Poems of Kou Zhong Chenggong. In Song Dynasty, Yang Jun was in an orderly way at the beginning, and in Qing Dynasty, there was a government and a building hall.

The rustling trees are far from the forest, and the autumn mountains are half sunset.

Interpretation: By the river, in the distance, in the bleak autumn wind, there is a sparse forest. Behind the forest is a towering mountain, half bathed in sunshine.