in the church of England, is an assurance of being employed and maintained as an officiating clergyman in some cathedral or parochial church, or other place of Divine worship. And, by the 3rd Canon, "no one is to be ordained but in order to be a curate or incumbent, or to have some minister's place in some church, or except he fellow, conduct, or chaplain, in some college in one of the universities, or be master of arts of five years standing, and live there at his own cost." By the same canon, the bishop who ordains a clerk without title, is bound to keep him till he prefer him to some ecclesiastical living.