Compare 1587 edition: 1 In which meane while,The Brytaines by the appoint+ment of Vic|torine make a Wall. Victorine the Ro|maine Lieutenant commaunded the Brytayns to make haſt with the wal, wherof ye haue heard made of turfe, and ſuſteyned with certaine poſtes of tymber paſſing ouerthwart the borders be|twixt them and their enimies, beginning as yee haue heard, at Abircorne, and ſo ſtretching forth by Glaſcow, and Kyrkpatryk, euen vnto Alde|cluch, nowe Dunbryton .lxxx. myles more Northward, than the other wal, which the Em|peror Adrian cauſed (as is ſayd to be made.
Compare 1587 edition: 1 Whereof the Scottes and Pictes being en|formed, they aſſembled themſelues togither,The Scottiſhe men and Picts interrupt the making of that Wall. and vnder the leading of a noble man called Graym, they ſet vpon the Brytaynes, as they were buſie in working about the ſame, and ſlue not onely a great number of labourers and ſouldiours, which were ſet to labour and defende the worke, but al|ſo entering into the Brytiſh borders, fetched from thence a great bootie of Cattaile and other riches, which they foũd diſperſed abrode in the coũtrey.
Compare 1587 edition: 1 This Graym (who as I ſayde was chiefe of this enterpryſe) was brother vnto the Scot|tiſh Queene, the wife of king Ferguſe.Graim, other|wiſe called Graham, and his lynage. He was borne in Denmarke (as ſome holde opinion) in the time of the Scottiſh mens baniſhment, and had a Scottiſh man to his father deſcended of a noble houſe, and a Daniſh Ladie to his mother. He himſelfe alſo maried a noble woman of that nation, and had by hir a daughter,Ferguſe ma|ried a daugh|ter of Graym. whome Fer|guſe by the perſwaſion of the king of Denmarke tooke to wife, and had iſſue by hir (afore his com|ming into Scotlande) three ſonnes, Eugenius, Dongarus, & Conſtantius, of whom hereafter in their place mention ſhall bee made, as occaſion ſerueth.