collapse:50 | Composer 2.5 | Literary task
Metadata
- Date: 2026-05-23
- Tool: Cursor 3.5 (macOS app)
- Model: Composer 2.5
- MTP Skill version: 1.0.0
- MTP Skill arguments:
collapse:50(slider)
Prompt
/mtp collapse:50 Tell the story of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll in a way that makes someone want to read it.Output
Section titled “Output”The text below is copied from the tool output using the “Copy” button.
A bored girl follows a white rabbit down a hole and falls for what feels like forever. Wonderland is a place where nothing stays the same size, the same shape, or the same rule for long.
Alice shrinks and grows until she cries a pool big enough to swim in. She meets a Dodo, a Lory, an Eaglet, and a Mouse who will not talk about cats. A Caterpillar on a mushroom asks rude questions and sends her to a Duchess’s kitchen, where pepper and a grinning Cheshire Cat make ordinary life impossible. The Cat vanishes slowly, tail last, leaving only its smile.
At a mad tea party, time is stuck at six o’clock. The Hatter, March Hare, and Dormouse trade nonsense as if it were sense. Alice plays croquet with the Queen of Hearts, where flamingos are mallets and hedgehogs are balls, and every hedge is a soldier bent double. The Queen shouts “Off with their heads!” so often that nobody is quite sure anyone has ever lost one.
A Gryphon and a Mock Turtle sing of lobsters and lost lessons. In the courtroom of the Knave of Hearts, who stole tarts he may never have touched, witnesses are nonsense and the jury is a box of creatures. Alice grows again, towers over the court, and calls them all a pack of cards.
They rush at her. She wakes on the riverbank, her sister still reading, the dream already fading—but the feeling remains: a world where curiosity is punished and rewarded in the same breath, where politeness and rudeness swap places, and where a child who asks “Why?” can unsettle an entire kingdom.
Read it for the language that turns like a hall of mirrors, for jokes that work on children and adults at once, and for the rare book that treats growing up as both a miracle and a very strange accident. You will not find another story that makes absurdity feel this inevitable—or this much fun.