The virtuous retain in their mind the good done to them, whereas the evil they experience drops from their mind, like water from a lotus-petal.—Jatakamala.
Vice, O king, is a mean thing, virtue is great and grand.—Questions of King Milinda.
I deem ... unrighteous actions contemptible.—Mahavagga.
Like food besmeared with poison, I abhor such happiness as is tainted with unrighteousness.—Jatakamala.
As men sow, thus shall they reap.—Ta-chwang-yan-king-lun.
Actions have their reward, and our deeds have their result.—Mahavagga.
Our deeds are not lost, they will surely come (back again).—Kokaliya-sutta.
Reaping the fruit of right or evil doing, and sharing happiness or misery in consequence.—Fo-sho-hing-tsan-king.
Your evil thoughts and evil words but hurt yourself.—Fo-sho-hing-tsan-king.
Hell was not created by any one.... The fire of the angry mind produces the fire of hell, and consumes its possessor. When a person does evil, he lights the fire of hell, and burns with his own fire.—Mulamuli.