Hestia Lyrics in English Pascu Y Rodri

Below, I translated the lyrics of the song Hestia by Pascu Y Rodri from Spanish to English.
Hello little creatures from the Peloponnese
Welcome to 'Gutting History' with Pascu and Rodri
Today we bring you the only one
The purest: Hestia
She was the first that was born
The first that Cronus devoured
And the last that he threw up
They call her the youngest and the oldest
She usually roams around the corners
She's the goddess of the hearth and the home
And even though she doesn't like to do evil
She'll smash your face in the name of peace
You'll see her flame burn in every city
Without doubt, you must pray to her
Hestia
At your party, in your kitchen
Hestia
She's the goddess that spies on you
Hestia
She enchants you and fascinates you but you can get burned
Hestia
She has a divine mansion
Hestia
She bosses the goddesses around
Hestia
She always charges a tip
She shakes the others down
Apollo and Poseidon went
To propose to her, what a babe
She grabbed Zeus by the big head
To swear that no god was going to touch her
You'll find her with her crew
Artemis and Athena, they're the best
Pure goddesses, spotless
And not like Aphrodite, how gross she is
And Hermes, loyal nephew, comes to tell her
Unique adventures
Hestia
Rhea invited her to a party
Hestia
And they drank like beasts
Hestia
Then, they took a nap
Someone is lurking
Hestia
Priapus is a very filthy god
Hestia
He comes up to her shamelessly
Hestia
But a donkey brayed and she manages to escape
She went to save a girl
And her babies, later on
Found a great city, Rome
Hestia
She's burned your food
Hestia
She's very virgin and very classy
Hestia
She's got loads of nieces
She has ideal hair
Hestia
Hestia
Hestia
Did you like these lyrics?
SONG MEANING

Hestia turns Greek mythology into a cheeky, sing-along lesson. Pascu y Rodri introduce the often overlooked goddess as both the first Olympian born and the last freed from Cronus’s stomach, which makes her simultaneously the oldest and the youngest of the pantheon. The lyrics paint her as the ever-watchful flame in every hearth, a patron of kitchens, feasts and family peace who is perfectly willing to smash a face if that peace is threatened. Listeners zoom through her résumé: eternal virgin, keeper of the home fire, recipient of daily offerings, and the deity who flatly rejects marriage proposals from Poseidon and Apollo by swearing an oath before Zeus.

The song crams centuries of mythic gossip into three adrenaline-packed minutes. We meet her “squad” (Artemis and Athena), witness her eye-rolling at glamorous Aphrodite, and watch her escape the lecherous Priapus when a braying donkey ruins his ambush. There is even a wink at Rome’s founders, whose lineage links back to maidens Hestia once shielded. Wrapped in modern slang, comedic threats and kitchen disasters, the track reminds us that the quiet hearth goddess is actually central to every city, every celebration and every plate of food you might accidentally burn if you forget to honor her fiery spirit.

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