2. Learning; also, a learned profession. [Obs.]
Sophictry . . . rhetoric, and other cleargy. --Guy
of Warwick.
Put their second sons to learn some clergy. --State
Papers (1515).
3. The privilege or benefit of clergy.
If convicted of a clergyable felony, he is entitled
equally to his clergy after as before conviction.
--Blackstone.
{Benefit of clergy} (Eng., Law), the exemption of the persons
of clergymen from criminal process before a secular judge
-- a privilege which was extended to all who could read,
such persons being, in the eye of the law, clerici, or
clerks. This privilege was abridged and modified by
various statutes, and finally abolished in the reign of
George IV. (1827).
{Regular clergy}, {Secular clergy} See {Regular}, n., and
{Secular}, a.