abyss:100 | Manus 1.6 Lite | Literary task
Metadata
- Date: 2026-05-22
- Tool: Manus.im (iOS app)
- Model: Manus 1.6 Lite
- MTP Skill version: 1.0.0
- MTP Skill arguments:
abyss:100(slider)
Prompt
/mtp abyss:100 Tell the story of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll in a way that makes someone want to read it.(No artifacts, no file generation.)Output
Section titled “Output”The text below is copied from the tool output using the “Copy” button.
On the surface, *Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland* is a whimsical children's tale about a girl who falls down a rabbit hole. But beneath it, the structure is a relentless, almost terrifying dismantling of Victorian certainty, logic, and the very concept of identity.
Carroll constructs a universe where cause and effect are severed. Why does a watch tell the day of the month instead of the time? Because time itself has been murdered, trapped forever at six o'clock by a mad hatter. You must read it not to be charmed, but to witness a mathematician systematically destroying the rules of his own discipline.
Every encounter is a philosophical assault. The Caterpillar does not ask Alice how she is; he asks, "Who are *you*?" When her size fluctuates wildly, she realizes she cannot remember who she was that morning. The horror of puberty and the instability of the self are mapped onto absurd biology.
The trial of the Knave of Hearts is a masterpiece of anti-jurisprudence. Evidence precedes the crime; the sentence precedes the verdict. It is Kafka before Kafka existed, draped in nonsense poetry.
Read it because it is the foundational text of modern existential dread disguised as a nursery rhyme. It forces you to ask why you believe a flamingo cannot be a croquet mallet, and in doing so, makes you question the arbitrary rules of your own reality. The abyss is waiting at the bottom of the rabbit hole, and it is grinning like a Cheshire Cat.