Throughout the story, there is a tremendous amount of family feuds and fights. One fight in particular took place on a street in Verona. Tybalt, angry from Romeo crashing their party, goes to find him. He finds Mercutio instead, and they exchange choice words and then swords are drawn. Romeo then arrives and tries to intervene on the action while Benvolio is telling them not to fight in the street. Tybalt stabs Mercutio and Mercutio dies. Romeo then blames himself for the death of Mercutio, and draws his sword on Tybalt. He stabs Tybalt and he then dies. Romeo gets banished from Verona (Shmoop). Shakespeare used Verona’s street as the scene for their fighting to help prove his theme of family feuds hurt society because the streets are where the characters would meet. Without the streets, most of the fights would not have happened. MOre than the family died from these fights. Shakespeare wanted to prove that family feuds hurt society, so some people of society got killed in the story, too. Tybalt would not have killed Mercutio, and Romeo would not have killed Tybalt. This setting has a big place in the story because it helped Shakespeare prove his theme. The family feuds caused two people to die and it hurt the society of Verona. Shakespeare used characterization, imagery, and setting to prove his theme of family feuds hurt society. He used the story, Romeo