Parables were commonplace in Chaucer's time, and audiences would have found them familiar.
Parables resembled the teachings of Jesus, with which most audiences in Chaucer's time were familiar.
Mostly he babbled instructions to a tree, thinking it was his assistant Percy Weasley, but then, his Imperius curse wearing off, he stammered that he has to see Dumbledore. (GoF28 'The Madness of Mr. Crouch', pp. 553-556). I hope my answer has come to your help. God bless and have a nice day ahead!
Answer:
<h3>whoever is a brave man with great soul....</h3>
Answer:
Based solely on this sentence? Best definition if we're only using this is...
A person who is authoritarian ('he alone'), blunt ('uses the literal meanings of words') and forcibly supresses others ('will not listen to others', 'makes decisions on behalf of others').
Not too far off the mark, but there's a lot more to fascism than is shown here.