"I have nothing to complain of you, you have nothing to complain of me."
The balanced sentence structure is often handled with particular skill:
"If … a daughter, let her die; however many daughters … let them die."
"The penalty is death, death to himself, death to his wife, death to all
his friends."
"Drive him away; if he should tell you his desire, force him away; if he is
very persistent, force him still more."
"Again they went up … again the chief waited … the chief again sent a
band."
"A crest arose; he finished his prayer to the amen; again a crest arose,
the second this; not long after another wave swelled."
"If she has given H. a kiss, if she has defiled herself with him, then we lose the wife, then take me to my grave without pity. But if she has hearkened … then she is a wife for you, if my grandchild has hearkened to my command."
A series of synonyms is not uncommon, or the repetition of an idea in other words:
"Do not fear, have no dread."