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void: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: void:50 (slider)

Prompt

/mtp void: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.

Alice, seven, follows a White Rabbit in a waistcoat down a hole.
She shrinks and grows from cakes and bottles. A pool of tears. A caucus race with a Dodo. A Caterpillar on a mushroom. A Cheshire Cat that vanishes except its grin.
The Duchess’s house. A baby turns into a pig. The Mad Hatter’s tea party never ends—it is always six o’clock. The Queen of Hearts plays croquet with flamingos and hedgehogs. “Off with their heads” is shouted often; no one is beheaded.
A trial. Stolen tarts. Nonsense evidence. Alice grows again. The court collapses into a pack of cards.
She wakes on the riverbank. Her sister still reads beside her.
The book was published in 1865. Carroll was the pen name of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, a mathematician at Oxford. The story began as a tale told on a boating trip to the Liddell sisters; Alice Liddell asked for it in writing.
Logic games sit under the surface. Size changes as proportion problems. The trial parodies court procedure. Wordplay runs through the text—puns, poems rewritten, characters who argue about meaning.
The original illustrations are by John Tenniel. The work entered the public domain long ago. Editions vary in layout and notes; the core episodes are stable across versions.
Readers who want dream logic without a moral lecture, animals that talk back, and a heroine who questions absurd authority often finish the book in one sitting. The sequel, *Through the Looking-Glass*, continues the same world with chess instead of cards.