I had the three e-readers set to
similar text passages, with closely matching if not identical fonts (at the least, I observed behavior with all e-readers set to nonserif fonts, and to serif fonts).
Not exact matches
The
text of the modern day Bible has surely gone through a
similar ordeal through the
passage of time, as many many many men have had their hands on shaping the
text that we read today.
Some
similar texts are provided so one
passage can be used with the whole class, and a
similar text used as guided or independent work.
In Persian culture Hafez's verse is used in ways
similar to that of the I Ching, for advice and foretelling, which Ala alludes to with his white stars highlighting areas of the
text (you open Hafez to a random
passage and it informs the question you have).
Various on - line versions of Good & Reuveny's (regrettably) paywalled «On the Collapse of Historical Civilizations «(2009)-- some of which are early drafts that (apparently) differ from the as - published article only in minor respects — may be reliably identified by concluding
text similar to the following
passage, which is taken verbatim from their as - reviewed as - published article:
The
passages — about two pages of
text — are, indeed, remarkably
similar.