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flow: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: flow:100 (slider)

Prompt

/mtp flow: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.)

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

Imagine a drowsy summer afternoon, the kind where time stretches languidly, and the world seems to hum with a gentle, soporific rhythm. It is on just such an afternoon that young Alice, perched by a riverbank with her sister, finds her attention drifting from the dull pages of a book without pictures or conversations. Her mind, already a fertile ground for fanciful thoughts, is ripe for an adventure, and as if summoned by her unspoken yearning, a most peculiar sight appears: a White Rabbit, dressed in a waistcoat, consulting a pocket watch with an air of frantic urgency. "Oh dear, oh dear, I shall be too late!" he exclaims, a phrase that ignites Alice's curiosity like a spark to tinder.
Without a moment's hesitation, driven by an impulse she cannot quite explain, Alice follows the extraordinary creature down a rabbit hole. This is no ordinary descent; it is a long, slow fall, a journey through a kaleidoscope of curious objects and peculiar sensations, hinting at the topsy-turvy world that awaits her. Landing softly, she finds herself in a vast hall with many locked doors, her only hope of escape a tiny key and an even tinier door, accessible only after a perplexing encounter with a bottle labeled "DRINK ME" and a cake marked "EAT ME," each causing her to shrink or grow in unpredictable ways. This initial disorientation sets the stage for a world where logic is a fluid concept, and the rules of reality are constantly being rewritten.
Her journey through Wonderland is a tapestry woven with encounters that defy all expectation. She weeps a pool of tears large enough to nearly drown her, then finds herself amidst a caucus race of animals, all equally bewildered and eager to dry off. She meets a Caterpillar smoking a hookah, offering cryptic advice and questioning her very identity, prompting Alice to ponder the ever-shifting nature of self. The Cheshire Cat, with its unsettling grin and ability to vanish and reappear at will, becomes a recurring, enigmatic guide, offering philosophical musings that are as perplexing as they are profound. Each character, from the Mad Hatter and the March Hare, forever trapped in an eternal tea party, to the perpetually late White Rabbit, contributes to the vibrant, nonsensical charm of this dreamscape.
As Alice delves deeper, the stakes rise. She finds herself entangled in the tyrannical whims of the Queen of Hearts, a monarch whose solution to every minor infraction is a resounding, "Off with their heads!" Alice witnesses a bizarre croquet match where flamingos serve as mallets and hedgehogs as balls, all under the watchful, terrifying gaze of the Queen. The climax arrives with a trial, a farcical proceeding where justice is a mere suggestion, and the accused, the Knave of Hearts, stands little chance against the Queen's arbitrary decrees. It is here, amidst the chaos and absurdity, that Alice finds her voice, challenging the illogical pronouncements and the very authority of Wonderland.
Ultimately, Alice's adventure is a vivid exploration of imagination, a journey through a world where the ordinary is extraordinary, and the impossible is commonplace. It is a tale that celebrates the power of curiosity, the resilience of a young girl navigating a world that makes no sense, and the enduring appeal of pure, unadulterated fantasy. To read Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is to surrender to its delightful madness, to embrace the joy of the absurd, and to rediscover the wonder that lies just beyond the veil of the everyday. It is an invitation to fall down the rabbit hole yourself and experience a story that has captivated hearts and minds for generations, proving that sometimes, the most profound truths are found in the most whimsical of places.