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helix: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: helix:50 (slider)

Prompt

/mtp helix:50 Tell the story of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll in a way that makes someone want to read it.

The text below is copied from the tool output using the “Copy” button.

**First:** A bored girl on a riverbank spots a White Rabbit in a waistcoat muttering about being late — *hypothesis:* this is just a funny animal; *check:* it pulls out a pocket watch; *tentative conclusion:* ordinary rules no longer apply.
**Next:** Alice follows it down a rabbit-hole and lands in a world where size, time, and sense are negotiable. She shrinks and grows from cakes and drinks, cries a pool of tears she must swim through, and meets a caucus of odd creatures — a Mouse, a Dodo, a Lory — who argue in riddles instead of solving problems.
**Then:** Wonderland sharpens into a parade of unforgettable voices. The Cheshire Cat grins and vanishes, leaving only advice. The Mad Hatter and March Hare host a tea party frozen at six o’clock. The Queen of Hearts shouts “Off with their heads!” over a croquet game played with flamingos and hedgehogs. Alice stays polite but increasingly firm: she is a guest here, not a pawn.
**Finally:** At the trial of the Knave of Hearts — accused of stealing tarts — the evidence is nonsense, the jury is animals, and the verdict is decided before it begins. Alice grows tall enough to call the court what it is: “Nothing but a pack of cards!” The dream breaks; she wakes on the grass, still a child — but no longer quite the same one.
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## Conclusion
*Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland* is not a moral fable dressed as fantasy; it is a **joyful argument with logic itself**. Carroll gives you a heroine who questions everything without losing her manners, a plot that feels like falling through jokes that turn serious, and scenes so vivid they have lived in culture for a century and a half. Read it for the wordplay, the surreal set pieces, and the quiet thrill of watching a sensible mind hold its ground in a world built on whimsy — and because, page by page, you will want to know what impossible thing happens next.