A member here quotes Shakespeare on their profile, which reminded me of how in Midsummer Nights Dream he had female characters having an argument with one wanting to fight it out, but the other girls afraid to fight. Pity! Anyway, here's their exchange,
Hermia challenges Helena,
And with her personage, her tall personage,
Her height, forsooth, she hath prevail'd with him.
And are you grown so high in his esteem;
Because I am so dwarfish and so low?
How low am I, thou painted maypole? speak;
How low am I? I am not yet so low
But that my nails can reach unto thine eyes
Helena replies,
I pray you, though you mock me, gentlemen,
Let her not hurt me: I was never curst;
I have no gift at all in shrewishness;
I am a right maid for my cowardice:
Let her not strike me. You perhaps may think,
Because she is something lower than myself,
That I can match her.
And as Hermia's anger is not abated Helena chickens out,
O, when she's angry, she is keen and shrewd!
She was a vixen when she went to school;
And though she be but little, she is fierce.
I will not trust you, I,
Nor longer stay in your curst company.
Your hands than mine are quicker for a fray,
My legs are longer though, to run away.
If Shakespeare had actually had the girls scrapping I imagine that would have excited the audience as much as a cat fight in a movie does today, but perhaps he was afraid of offending the sensibilities of the aristocracy and royalty. And it got me wondering if any pieces of classic literature did have cat fights.