Romeo is not present during the street brawl between the Capulets and Montagues in Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." He enters the scene after the fight has ended.
at home at home chillen
The third civil brawl in Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet" is started by Tybalt and Mercutio. Their conflict eventually leads to tragic consequences for both Romeo and Juliet.
The Prince stopped it.
There is a fray in act 1 scene 1. A fray is a brawl, a general fight.
Capulet servants encounter Montague servants on the street and talk trash to each other.
He says that fighting in public would be punishable by death.
Unfortunately, Romeo gets into a street brawl, kills Juliet's cousin, goes into hiding and is sentenced (in absentia) to be banished from Verona.
There are a number of fights in Romeo and Juliet, but if you mean the one in Act 1 Scene 1, the Prince, Escalus, stopped it.
Either from a CD you receive during a brawl or its a hidden CD in the vault.
The prince responds to the brawl by banishing Romeo from Verona as punishment for his role in the fight. He hopes that this will restore order and prevent further violence in the city.
The prince spares Romeo because he understands the situation, knowing that Romeo acted out of love rather than malice. He also believes that the feud between the Montagues and Capulets is the root cause of the tragedy and wants to give Romeo a chance to avoid further bloodshed by leaving Verona. By banishing Romeo instead of executing him, the prince is attempting to bring peace to the city.