Page 304
SILVER
STREET.
S.
M.
"O come,
let
us
worship
and
bow
down;
let
us
kneel
before
the
Lord
our
maker."
Ps.
95-6.
Isaac
Smith,
1770.
Isaac
Watts,
1719.
Key
of
C
Major.
Come
sound
his
praise
a-broad,
and
hymns
of
glo
-
ry
sing,
Je
-
ho
-
vah
is
the
sove
-
reign
Lord,
The
u
ni
-
ver
-
sal
Come
sound
his
praise
a-broad,
and
hymns
of
glo
-
ry
sing,
Je
-
ho
-
vah
is
the
sove
reign
Lord,
The
u
ni
-
ver
-
sal
King.
Hal
-
le
-lu
-
jah,
Hal
-
le -lu-jah,
hal-le-lu-jah,
hal-le-lu-jah,
hal-le-lu-jah,
Praise
ye
the
Lord.
King.
Praise
ye
the
Lord,
Hal-le-lu
-
jah,
Praisel
ye
the
Lord,
Hal
-
le-lu-
jah,
hal
-
le
-lu-jah,
hal -le
lu-jah,
hal-le-lu-jah,
Praise
ye
the
Lord.
Original
title
of
the
hymn
is
"Psalms
before
Service
"
It
has
six
stanzas
and
is
based
on
the
ninety-fifth
Pslam.
See
other
sketches
of
Isaac
Watts
in
this
book.
Silver
Street
was
composed
by
Isaac
Smith,
an
English
composer,
born
in
London
about
1735,
died
there
about
1800.
The
tune
has
been
published
in
many
of
the
American
Song
and
Tune
Books,
and
is
a
fine
old
melody.
It
appears
in
the
Presbyterian
Psalmist.
Mason
Sacred
Harp
1840,
Southern
Harmony
by
Walker,
1835
and
1848,
page
280,
and
many
other
books.
Mr.
Smith,
its
author,
composed
a
great
deal
of
very
valuable
sacred
music,
also
see
U.
S-
Psalmody
by
S.
B.
Pond,
page
143,
1841,
Boston
Academy,
collection
of
church
music,
1836,
page
150,
and
many
other
books.