The clear breeze and the bright moon are priceless
There is love in the mountains and near the water
This is a couplet that Liang Zhangju obtained for editing "Canglang Pavilion Chronicles". The upper part is connected with Ouyang Xiu's sentence, and the lower part is connected with Su Shun's Qin sentence, both of which are the skills of Canglang Pavilion. This couplet uses the antonyms "have" versus "nothing", and "all have feelings" versus "priceless". The meaning is that the clear breeze and bright moon are everywhere, but for ordinary people, money can't buy them; the mountains are close to the water and far away. They are ruthless things, but in the eyes of the poet, they all become sentimental things, and the contrast is sharp. Saying "near water and distant mountains" is neat to "cool breeze and bright moon" means that the self-pairings in the sentence are neat, that is, "far away mountains" are very neat to "near water", "bright moon" is very neat to "qingfeng", and "near water" is very neat to "near water". "Yaoshan" is opposition and more interesting.
Other answers
The red candles in the brocade tent are sentimental
The flowing water and high mountains are sentimental
The old scroll and the lonely lamp are sentimental
Autumn Rain and Begonia from Passion