I don't think you understand something very basic about writers. They are not necessarily characters in the works they write. We do not worry about whether Edward loves Bella or Stephanie Meyer. We do not ask whether Obi Wan Kenobi speaks better than George Lucas. And Shakespeare does not have soliloquys, although he writes them for his characters like Hamlet. Shakespeare is not a character in any play he wrote (although he is sometimes a character in other peoples' plays, as he is in Shakespeare in Love).
In any case, "Hamlet's soliloquy" is meaningless. Hamlet has five soliloquys: "O that this too too solid flesh would melt", "O what a rogue and peasant slave am I", "To be or not to be, that is the question", "Now is the very witching time of night" and "How all occasions do inform against me." Unless you specify which one you are talking about, nobody can answer your question.
Boron
I don't know wut da hail
Hamlets are small villages or groups of houses.
There is no specific collective noun of hamlet, in which case, use an appropriate noun suitable for the situation, for example a region of hamlets, a coalition of hamlets, an enterprise of hamlets, etc.
That would be Hamlet's "To be or not to be..." soliloquy, where Hamlet contemplates suicide.
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It's from Hamlets soliloquy in Hamlet by W Shakespeare.
Boron
"To be or not to be."
Metafiction
I don't know wut da hail
Mary Zenet Maher has written: 'Modern Hamlets & their soliloquies' -- subject(s): Acting, Hamlet (Legendary character), Soliloquy, Stage history
Hamlets are small villages or groups of houses.
he sold all of his hamlets,.............................>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>><><><<><>:<><><><>><><><
Soliloquy is pernounced... suh lil' uh kwe
Tower Hamlets Cemetery was created in 1841.
Which soliloquy are you alluding to?