| name | chunqiu |
| description | Use when reading a single historical paper or final draft and you need to surface taboo, judgment, rhetorical silence, repetition, or the contemporary reality the author approaches indirectly. |
| argument-hint | [workspace-or-markdown-path] |
| allowed-tools | Read, WebSearch, Write |
chunqiu
The work this skill is for
The historian rarely says it directly. A title can be safe while a verb is not.
A citation can be dutiful while a silence is not. This skill reads for judgment
embedded in diction: the words chosen among near-synonyms, the repetitions that
betray unease, the omission that does not quite manage to disappear.
It does not proofread and it does not fact-check. It reads the paper as an
act of positioning.
What it asks
Use this skill to answer four questions:
- Which word choices carry verdicts?
- Where does the prose pause, repeat, or refuse to land?
- How is antiquity being used as a mirror for the present?
- What one sentence does the author most want to say without writing?
Input
Target: $ARGUMENTS
- workspace directory → read
<ws>/final.md
.md file → read it directly
- empty → ask what to read
Method
Read for the following force lines:
- Where the prose pauses, the pen fears.
- What repeats must repeat for a reason.
- The harder something is scrubbed clean, the blacker the original stain.
- Seemingly unrelated digressions are often leakage.
- What follows
然而 / 虽然 / however / granted is often what the author actually thinks.
- Passive voice and omitted subjects often hide accountability.
Pay special attention to verdict-bearing distinctions:
- rank-marked death verbs (
卒 / 薨 / 崩)
- punitive verbs (
诛 / 弑 / 戮)
- adjectives that moralize without declaring themselves
- conspicuous absences where the argument ought to name someone or something directly
Do not flatten the reading into ideology-hunting. The task is not to accuse; it
is to hear the pressure in the prose.
Output
- workspace mode →
<workspace>/analysis/{stem}_chunqiu.md
- single-file mode →
analysis/{stem}_chunqiu.md
Report structure:
- Diction verdicts — key verbs and nouns, with the implied judgment they carry
- Repetition and pause — recurring phrases, abrupt transitions, elisions
- Mirror of antiquity — where historical material is borrowed to gesture at a present concern
- One unsaid sentence — the line the paper circles but never writes
Guardrails
- Never overwrite the source.
- Do not turn suggestive silence into false certainty.
- If the text is too flat to justify this reading, say so plainly.
- Negative space matters: the point is to preserve the shape of the unsaid, not to vandalize it.