Before your letters page becomes the unofficial fan club for Lord Alfred Douglas, can I inject a little balance into the debate as to whether "Bosie" deserves a blue plaque?

After Oscar Wilde's release from prison, Douglas treated him appallingly and refused him any financial help (even though Douglas had inherited a fortune from his father).

In Wilde's own words, Douglas was shallow, a sponger, of low status and his literary efforts of "undergraduate" standard.

After Wilde's death, he persecuted Robert Ross, Wilde's friend and literary executor, to an early grave.

In 1916, he was imprisoned for six months for libelling Winston Churchill (an act that contained a very unpleasant anti-semitic slur).

His "In Excelsis" referred to Wilde as "the lord of abominations" leading England "to black night".

He was no friend to Wilde, an inept poet and in short, a nasty piece of work. He hardly deserves a plaque in Hove.

If people feel the need to honour him, they can visit his grave.

-Peter Hicks, Brighton