During the brawl in "Romeo and Juliet," Romeo is initially absent. He has been feeling melancholic due to his unrequited love for Rosaline and has been wandering around in a state of depression. When he finally arrives, he tries to avoid the conflict and is reluctant to engage in the fight, reflecting his desire for peace rather than violence. His isolation from the brawl highlights his introspective nature at that moment in the story.
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 two characters who started the third civil brawl was Mercutio and Tybalt. Mercutio is Benvolio and Romeo's close friend while Tybalt is Juliet's cousin.
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.
Although Romeo's killing of Tybalt in a street brawl would normally make his life forfeit, the fact that Tybalt himself had forfeited his life by killing Mercutio in a street brawl, and that Romeo was therefore only carrying out the sentence of the law, was taken in mitigation of his sentence, which was reduced from the death penalty to banishment.
tybalt and romeo
Lady Capulet calls for Romeo's death after Tybalt is killed because the Prince created a law saying that the next person to start a brawl in the square will be executed. However, Romeo is spared by the Prince because Mercutio, Romeo's best friend, was also killed, and Romeo killed Tybalt in revenge. The Prince banishes Romeo from Verona instead.