<P> Peter is the personal servant of the Nurse's . He appears to be a loyal servant, always quick to obey the Nurse . He is chastised for not fighting Mercutio for the Nurse's honour, but insists that he "saw no man use you a pleasure; if I had, / my weapon should quickly have been out". He appears again in act four, scene five in a brief comic relief scene with a number of musicians . </P> <P> Gregory and Sampson are the Capulet servants . Gregory is originally hesitant to start a fight . Sampson, however, bites his thumb at Abram, "Which is a disgrace to them, if they bear it". The Montagues then retaliate in earnest . Benvolio arrives to break up the fight but ends up fighting with Tybalt . Both Gregory and Sampson appear to be friends of their master Tybalt's . </P> <P> In the opening scene, the two engage in a dialogue full of puns on "coal" and "eye", each intending to outdo the other and get each other ready to fight Montagues . The rhetorical form is called stychomythia, wherein characters participate in a short, quick exchanges of one - upmanship . Their discussion and brawl in this scene set the stage for the rivalry and hatred which fills the rest of the play . </P> <P> Anthony, Potpan, and two other servants to the Capulet family play out a short comic scene in act one, scene five, arguing over the preparations for Capulet's feast . Capulet's servants are referenced again in act four, scene one; Capulet orders them to begin preparations for another party: the wedding of Juliet and Paris . </P>

Who is a montague and who is a capulet