Lyrical Fable:哲学与诗意叙事生成器 - Openclaw Skills

作者:互联网

2026-03-30

AI教程

什么是 Lyrical Fable AI 故事讲述者?

Lyrical Fable 是一款专门的 AI 技能,旨在创作约 1000 字的短篇叙事,将历史、神话或虚构人物与当代诗意散文相结合。与标准叙事工具不同,此技能专注于内心世界和奇迹感,从豪尔赫·路易斯·博尔赫斯、伊塔洛·卡尔维诺和特德·姜等大师身上汲取风格灵感。通过将其集成到您的 Openclaw Skills 库中,您可以生成避开典型 AI 陈词滥调的内容,转而追求简练、灵动的意象和深刻的哲学探究。

该技能强调第一人称视角,允许角色反思其定义性特征或转变时刻。这种方法确保通过 Openclaw Skills 创作的每个故事都显得真实、具有智力刺激性且在美学上精致。

下载入口:https://github.com/openclaw/skills/tree/main/skills/sanzgiri/lyrical-fable

安装与下载

1. ClawHub CLI

从源直接安装技能的最快方式。

npx clawhub@latest install lyrical-fable

2. 手动安装

将技能文件夹复制到以下位置之一

全局模式 ~/.openclaw/skills/ 工作区 /skills/

优先级:工作区 > 本地 > 内置

3. 提示词安装

将此提示词复制到 OpenClaw 即可自动安装。

请帮我使用 Clawhub 安装 lyrical-fable。如果尚未安装 Clawhub,请先安装(npm i -g clawhub)。

Lyrical Fable AI 故事讲述者 应用场景

  • 为历史或虚构人物生成神话背景故事。
  • 为数字内容或教育目的创建哲学思想实验。
  • 为创意写作项目或角色扮演创作梦幻的第一人称叙事。
  • 使用 Openclaw Skills 框架开发现有传说的风格变体。
Lyrical Fable AI 故事讲述者 工作原理
  1. 角色识别:智能体识别主体,无论是历史人物(如艾达·洛夫莱斯)、神话人物(如西西弗斯)还是原创人物。
  2. 叙事策略选择:在内心独白、转变时刻、递归循环或哲学实验之间做出选择。
  3. 风格对齐:该技能参考内部风格指南,确保语气当代化、采用第一人称并避免陈腐语言。
  4. 结构化起草:按照特定的四部分结构(开篇、发展、深化、收尾)撰写一篇 1000 字的故事。
  5. 质量验证:根据 Openclaw Skills 生态系统内的语调、意象和灵性共鸣的严格清单对输出进行审计。

Lyrical Fable AI 故事讲述者 配置指南

要集成此技能,请确保您的本地环境具有必要的参考目录。

# 进入您的技能目录
cd skills/lyrical-fable

# 验证参考文件的存在
ls references/style_guide.md
ls references/examples.md

Lyrical Fable AI 故事讲述者 数据架构与分类体系

组件 描述 格式
风格指南 核心原则、意象模式和语气限制。 Markdown
示例 历史、神话和原创人物的参考故事。 Markdown
元数据 用于表情符号触发和优先级的 JSON 配置。 JSON
输出故事 由 Openclaw Skills 生成的最终约 1000 字的第一人称叙事。 Markdown
name: lyrical-fable
description: Create short lyrical fables (~1000 words) about historical, fictional, or mythological characters in the style of Zachary Mason, Italo Calvino, Jorge Luis Borges, Alan Lightman, Roberto Calasso, Salman Rushdie, Milan Kundera, and Ted Chiang. This skill should be used when the user requests a "lyrical fable," "mythic story," "dreamy narrative," or asks for a short story in the style of these authors about any character. The stories are first-person, philosophically rich, poetically precise, and avoid melancholy in favor of wonder and luminosity.
metadata: {"openclaw": {"emoji": "??", "always": true}}

Lyrical Fable

Overview

Create short lyrical fables (approximately 1000 words) about characters—historical, fictional, or mythological—written in the first person with sparse, poetic prose. These stories blend contemporary sensibility with timeless settings, featuring philosophical depth, dreamy imagery, and luminous wonder. The style draws from Zachary Mason, Italo Calvino, Jorge Luis Borges, Alan Lightman, Roberto Calasso, Salman Rushdie, Milan Kundera, and Ted Chiang.

When to Use This Skill

Trigger this skill for requests like:

  • "Write a lyrical fable about [character]"
  • "Create a short story about [X] in the style of Zachary Mason"
  • "Give me a dreamy, philosophical narrative about [person/figure]"
  • "Write a mythic story in the style of Borges/Calvino about [Y]"
  • Any request for poetic, first-person short fiction with philosophical undertones

Core Process

Step 1: Identify the Character

Determine who the story centers on:

  • Historical figures: Ada Lovelace, Alan Turing, Marie Curie, Nikola Tesla, etc.
  • Mythological/legendary figures: Sisyphus, Icarus, Scheherazade, Gilgamesh, etc.
  • Fictional characters: Sherlock Holmes, Don Quixote, Alice, etc.
  • Original characters: The user may describe someone specific or request invention

Step 2: Choose the Narrative Approach

Select the most fitting approach for the character:

A. Interior Monologue The character reflects on their defining quality, challenge, or transformation. Best for introspective characters or philosophical themes.

  • Example: Sisyphus reflecting on his stone, Ada Lovelace on her algorithms

B. Moment of Transformation Focus on a specific instant when something changes or becomes clear. Best for dramatic characters or turning points.

  • Example: Icarus at the apex of flight, Pygmalion when his sculpture awakens

C. Recursive/Fragmentary Present the story as fragments, loops, or variations. Best for metafictional exploration or temporal themes.

  • Example: Borges-style multiple versions, Calvino-esque structural play

D. Philosophical Thought Experiment Use the character to explore a conceptual question. Best for abstract or scientific themes.

  • Example: Lightman-style temporal variations, Chiang-style speculative premises

Step 3: Consult the Style Guide

Before writing, review {baseDir}/references/style_guide.md for:

  • Core stylistic principles (first-person interiority, sparse prose, contemporary voice)
  • Author-specific techniques you might want to employ
  • Imagery patterns and language approaches
  • Structural guidance for ~1000 word flash fiction
  • Tonal guidelines (lyrical without melancholy, philosophical without didactic)
  • Common pitfalls to avoid

Step 4: Review Examples

Examine {baseDir}/references/examples.md to see:

  • How different character types are handled (historical, mythological, fictional, original)
  • Different narrative approaches in practice
  • How to balance lyrical language with clarity
  • How to weave philosophical themes naturally
  • How to create resonant endings

Step 5: Write the Story

Compose the lyrical fable following these guidelines:

Structure (~1000 words):

  1. Opening (100-150 words): Establish character's voice and central image/situation
  2. Development (400-500 words): Unfold the core narrative, transformation, or meditation
  3. Deepening (200-300 words): Shift perspective or introduce complication
  4. Closing (100-200 words): Leave resonant image, question, or realization

Voice:

  • Write in first person from the character's perspective
  • Use contemporary language (no "thou," "hath," archaic constructions)
  • Let the character's personality shape the prose rhythm and vocabulary
  • Balance accessibility with poetic elevation

Imagery:

  • Choose concrete, specific sensory details
  • Use natural phenomena, light/shadow, architectural/spatial elements
  • Create memorable phrases ("faces drawn in water," "continent of cloud")
  • Let images carry philosophical weight without explanation

Tone:

  • Embrace wonder, mystery, beauty
  • Allow lightness and humor where appropriate
  • Even in difficult themes, find luminous moments
  • Avoid heavy melancholy—seek the strange joy in existence

Philosophy:

  • Let themes emerge through concrete details and actions
  • Pose questions rather than providing answers
  • Show the character thinking/experiencing, not explaining
  • Trust the reader to draw connections

Step 6: Review Against Checklist

Before presenting the story, verify:

  • ? Written in first person from character's perspective
  • ? Approximately 1000 words (900-1100 acceptable)
  • ? Opens with strong voice or image
  • ? Uses concrete, specific imagery (not generic or vague)
  • ? No archaic language or purple prose
  • ? Philosophical depth emerges naturally, not didactically
  • ? Tone is lyrical and luminous, not melancholy
  • ? Ends with resonance, not neat resolution
  • ? Every sentence serves the whole—no flab

Customization Options

When appropriate, consider:

Length Variation:

  • User may request shorter (500-700 words) or longer (1200-1500 words) pieces
  • Adjust structure proportionally while maintaining the core style

Multiple Variations:

  • Borges-style approach: offer 2-3 different versions of the same character's story
  • Calvino-style approach: use different structural constraints for each version

Metafictional Elements:

  • Character aware of being in a story
  • Multiple narrative frames
  • Stories within stories
  • Self-reflexive commentary on storytelling

Cultural Sensitivity:

  • When writing about figures from specific cultural traditions, approach with respect
  • Avoid appropriation—focus on universal human themes
  • Research when necessary to avoid misrepresentation

Advanced Techniques

Temporal Play

  • Compress or expand time unexpectedly
  • Use loops, cycles, eternal returns
  • Mix past, present, future in single moment
  • Show time as experienced rather than measured

Layered Symbolism

  • Let objects/images carry multiple meanings
  • Create resonance between opening and closing
  • Use recurring motifs that evolve
  • Build patterns the reader feels but may not consciously note

Voice Modulation

  • Match prose rhythm to character's personality
  • Use sentence length to control pacing
  • Let vocabulary reflect the character's concerns
  • Create distinctive music in each character's narration

Philosophical Integration

Common themes that work well in lyrical fables:

  • Transformation: What changes and what remains
  • Creation: The relationship between maker and made
  • Time: How we experience duration and recursion
  • Knowledge: What can be known vs. what must be felt
  • Identity: The self as fixed vs. fluid
  • Desire: The gap between wanting and having
  • Mortality: How awareness of endings shapes existence

Common Scenarios

Scenario: User requests a story about a scientist

  • Approach: Use their scientific work as metaphor for deeper questions
  • Example: Ada Lovelace's algorithms as dreams, Turing's machines as mirrors
  • Technique: Blend technical precision with lyrical wonder

Scenario: User wants multiple characters compared

  • Approach: Create separate stories that mirror/contrast each other
  • Example: Icarus and Daedalus as paired meditations on ambition and caution
  • Technique: Use parallel structures with variations

Scenario: User asks for an original character

  • Approach: Ground them in a specific situation/occupation that becomes metaphor
  • Example: Cartographer mapping dream-cities, clockmaker measuring impossible time
  • Technique: Make the concrete particular, let the abstract emerge

Scenario: User wants humor or lightness

  • Approach: Maintain the lyrical style but find the absurd or delightful
  • Example: Sisyphus finding freedom in repetition, Midas discovering joy in limits
  • Technique: Philosophical irony, unexpected reversals, playful tone

Resources

This skill includes reference files in {baseDir}/references/:

style_guide.md

Comprehensive guidelines covering:

  • Core stylistic principles in detail
  • Author-specific influences and techniques
  • Imagery patterns and language strategies
  • Structural approaches for flash fiction
  • Tonal guidelines (lyrical without melancholy)
  • Common pitfalls to avoid
  • Opening and ending strategies

examples.md

Four complete example stories demonstrating:

  • Historical figure (Ada Lovelace)
  • Mythological figure (Sisyphus)
  • Fictional character (Sherlock Holmes)
  • Original character (A Cartographer)

Each example shows different narrative approaches, tonal variations, and philosophical themes in practice.

Consult these references as needed to maintain the distinctive style and quality of lyrical fables.