In contrast, the harp is a musical instrument that is an organized sound that plays a pleasant music and is also a sense of being civilized.
Furthermore, the setting is also a difference. Ruling as king, Hrothgar decided to construct a monument for his success-a great hall called Herot. Herot is a famous hall, filled with song and treasure. The poet sings of it first creation: "Recalling / The Almighty making the earth, shaping / These beautiful plains marked off by oceans, / Then proudly setting the sun and moon / Of the nations who now move on its face" (6-13). Herot functions as both a symbol and setting. Symbolically, it represents the achievements of Hrothgar and the level of human civilization. Herot is a place of light and warmth in the dark, cold winters. The hall is a place of community, where traditions are preserved, loyalty is rewarded, and stories are told. Nonetheless, Grendel does not live in luxury as the Danes. "Grendel, who haunted the moors, the wild / Marshes, and made his home in a hell / Not hell but earth. He was spawned in that slime," (17-19). The lair where Grendel hides from the world is symbolic of his live as
outcast. Hidden beneath a dark, forbidding swamp, the lair allows him a degree of safety and privacy in a world that he views as hostile. The lair represents his heritage. As descendant of Cain, he is associated with demons, dark magic, and hell itself. The lair itself represents a strange world to Herot. One is high and bright and full of song and joy. The other is dark and damp and full of evil, beneath a swamp and the symbolic home of angry outcasts.