Song information On this page you can find the lyrics of the song Jinny Bingham's Ghost, artist - Frank Turner. Album song No Man's Land, in the genre Иностранная авторская песня
Date of issue: 15.08.2019
Record label: Xtra Mile
Song language: English
Jinny Bingham's Ghost |
If you’re heading down to Camden Town |
Be sure to raise a toast |
To the patron saint of the waifs and strays |
To Jinny Bingham’s ghost |
Once she was a fresh-faced lass, from Kentish Town she came |
Her people, they were pedlars, Jinny Bingham was her name |
With her husband Gypsy George a Camden coach house they did keep |
Till they hung him by his neck from Tyburn Tree for stealing sheep |
It broke her heart to lose her love when she was just a child |
So a man named Derby took the hand of Jinny meek and mild |
He was a drinker, not a thinker, daily brought his wife to tears |
Until one Camden winter morning, Derby simply disappeared |
If you’re heading down to Camden Town |
Be sure to raise a toast |
To the patron saint of the waifs and strays |
To Jinny Bingham’s ghost |
She earned her reputation on those bitter Camden streets |
If you’d tarry with the Bingham girl, you’d hold your manhood cheap |
But even so the miser Pitcher was the third man on her lips |
Till one night they checked her oven, found him burned up to a crisp |
They tried her for his murder, thought they’d finally cooked her goose |
But even when the next man died, Jinny somehow slipped the noose |
He was a fugitive from justice, for love she took him in |
But he beat her once to often and the poison did him in |
If you’re heading down to Camden Town |
Be sure to raise a toast |
To the patron saint of the waifs and strays |
To Jinny Bingham’s ghost |
The locals didn’t like her, false words followed her around |
They called her wicked woman, sorceress of some reknown |
They swore that on the gravestones of her husbands she’d grown rich |
The ribald and the righteous, they knew she was a witch |
But the reason she was hated was a simple one indeed |
She had kindness for the careless, she took in those in need |
The guilty and the gamblers, the harlots and the whores |
All knew that Jinny offered sanctuary at her bar |
No judgement for the judged, and you can never fall too far |
On the day she died, they swore they saw the devil by her side |
A mob broke down her door and from her chair her body pried |
The tavern is still standing, it’s now called the Underworld |
And it still offers sanctuary for all broken boys and girls |
So let’s head on down to Camden Town |
And folks, let’s raise a toast |
To the patron saint of the waifs and strays |
To Jinny Bingham’s ghost |