
When Persephone had heard this grateful news, she had eaten 6 pomegranate seeds from the underground world leading her not to come back to earth But when all the crops had died and flowers had withered, Zeus had a deal with Hades and told him that Persephone could stay with him for half a year and with Demeter for half a year. She had told Zeus she wouldn’t do her job until she could get her daughter back. Demeter, who had found this out, went to Zeus and told him that Hades had got her daughter.

Demeter searching for her last hope had asked Hecate and he had said he’d seen Persephone get kidnapped by Hades. When none of them had seen Persephone, Demeter who was distressed had stopped doing her work. When days passed Demeter started looking for her, but when she couldn’t find her daughter, she went asking to all the Gods. She was a dual deity, since, in addition to presiding over the dead with intriguing autonomy, as the daughter of Demeter, she was also a goddess of fertility. Her mother hears her cry, and begins a search for. Persephone, the daughter of Demeter and Zeus, was the wife of Hades and the Queen of the Underworld. Day turned into night Demeter was worried about Persephone seeing that she hadn’t returned. Hades abducting Persephone, fresco in the small royal tomb at Vergina, Macedonia, Greece, circa 340 BC. Hades who was getting lonely decided to take her as his wife so he opened the ground into two and snatched Persephone from Earth. One day when Persephone was spending her time on earth, she was caught by the eye of Hades. She was the alluring daughter of Zeus and Demeter. But, the few times he did, he encountered Persephone. The Demeter and Persephone Story: The Genesis As the legend goes, Hades rarely ventured out of the underworld. Every step she took on earth, flowers would bloom and animals would follow her behind. It’s a story about love, relationships, family bonds, grief, loss, and a renewal of hope.

Persephone is a beautiful girl that was born between Zeus and Demeter.
