Höpoe - by Frank Kawaikapuokalani Hewett

Kai koʻo o Kilauea kai koʻo o Puna
Popoʻi i ke ʻā a Pele
ʻO ke kai ʻula ʻo ke kai ʻōlena
Ke ala kai o Pele

Haki kū ka ʻino haki kakala
Kao kū i oʻu Lehua
Uwe Hōpoe holo i kai Hāʻena
ʻAʻohe ala e ola

Wela ʻo Kilauea, wela ʻo Puna
Ua ʻā i ke ahi a Pele
Mālama ke kanaka mālama ka lehua
Mālama ke kaunu moe ipo 
Hui:
Haʻuhaʻu uwe, haʻuhaʻu uwe
Haʻuhau uwe
The strong force of Kilauea and Puna
Forms a burning wave of Pele
The red and yellow (lava) flows combine
To form a fiery path of Pele
The fire (Pele) breaks everything to pieces
Which is overwhelming to my Lehua
Hopoe cries and runs seaward to Haʻena
But, there's nowhere to find refuge
 
Kilauea and Puna are hot
As the fires of Pele burn
Cherish the people, cherish the lehua
Cherish the place where we make love 
 
Chorus:
Sob, sob
Sob

Source: Recorded by Makaha Sons on CD " Kuikawa". Hōpoe, the hula dancer, was the best friend of Hiʻiaka, the youngest sister of Pele. They spent their happiest days together in Puna, where Hōpoe taught Hiʻiaka the hula. Pele was envious of this friendship, and destroyed Puna in a fit of jealousy, a place beloved by Hiʻiaka. Her grief was magnified when she realized Pele had turned Hōpoe to a balancing stone in the sea at Keaʻau.