John Gower comments on Tyler in his 14th-century poem
Vox Clamantis: "The jay's voice is wild and he has only learnt the art of speaking from the classes with whom the Latin poet is identified." A number of works in the post-medieval period have featured Tyler as
protagonist. Tyler is the protagonist of the play
Wat Tyler and Jack Straw, or, The Mob Reformers (1730) first performed at
Bartholomew Fair in 1730. Tyler is represented in
Robert Southey's
Wat Tyler, A Dramatic Poem, which was written in 1794 and published in 1813. The first novel to feature Tyler is Mrs. O'Neill's
The Bondman: A Story of the Days of Wat Tyler (1833). He is the protagonist in
Pierce Egan the Younger's novel
Wat Tyler, or the Rebellion of 1381 (1841), a highly radical text published at the height of the second phase of the
Chartist movement that argued for republican government in England. Egan's novel was subsequently abridged and plagiarised and published as
The Life and Adventures of Wat Tyler: The Good and the Brave (1851). Tyler is the protagonist of the
penny dreadful serial novel
Wat Tyler; or, The King and the Apprentice which appeared in weekly parts in ''
The Young Englishman's Journal'' in 1867. Tyler appears as a main character in
William Harrison Ainsworth's
Merry England; or, Nobles and Serfs (1874). In
Charles Dickens'
Bleak House (1853), his name is invoked by Sir Leicester Dedlock as an example of what would happen if any concessions were made to "some person in the lower classes". Dickens also makes reference to Tyler in the novel
Our Mutual Friend. Tyler features as a sympathetic hero in the novel
A Dream of John Ball (1888) by
William Morris. Tyler is mentioned in
Redburn by
Herman Melville and in ''
A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by Mark Twain. Tyler features briefly in the historical fiction The Mediation of Ralph Hardelot
(1888) by William Minto. The juvenile novel A March on London'' (1897) by
G. A. Henty, depicts Tyler briefly as a "sullen and resentful"
demagogue. Henty's book was illustrated by W.H. Margetson.
Long Will (1903), a novel by
Florence Converse, depicts a meritorious Tyler. The 1921 play
Wat Tyler by Halcott Glover interprets Tyler as a sympathetic protester against feudal tyranny, who is driven into violence by John Ball's preaching.
Riot at Gravesend (1952), a novel by William Howard Woods, focuses on the combats between the rebels and the authorities.
Who Then Was The Gentleman? (1963) is a novel by Charles E. Israel, that renders a courageous and charismatic Tyler.
A Summer Storm (1976), a novel by
Jane Lane, depicts Tyler as a villain. The novel
The Confession of Jack Straw (1991) by Simone Zelitch features Tyler as a central character. The children's novel
Fire, Bed, and Bone (1997) by
Henrietta Branford has Tyler as one of its characters. Tyler is the principal character in the historical novel
Now is the Time (2015) by
Melvyn Bragg. Tyler's story is told in an early chapter of
La guerre des pauvres (2019; translated as
The War of the Poor, 2021) by
Éric Vuillard. English composer
Alan Bush wrote an opera,
Wat Tyler, about Tyler's life. Bush's opera was premiered at the
Leipzig Opera in 1953. Singer-songwriter
Martin Newell references Tyler and the Peasant's Revolt in his song "The Jangling Man" from the 1990 album
Number Thirteen, in reference to the poll tax riots. English folk singer-songwriter
Frank Turner references Tyler's negotiations at Smithfield in "Sons of Liberty" from the 2009 album
Poetry of the Deed, and again mentions Tyler by name in "One Foot Before the Other" from 2011 album
England Keep My Bones.
Provisional IRA member and hunger striker
Bobby Sands references "Wat the Tyler" and his poor in one of his wider-known poems written while in prison, "The Rhythm of Time". A cultural history survey of Tyler's portrayals in post-medieval literature down to the modern period has been written by Stephen Basdeo who argues that most of Tyler's appropriations in popular culture appear at times of political excitement. The feature film
The Uprising (2026 Film) directed by
Paul Greengrass is scheduled for release in September 2026.
Andrew Garfield will play Wat Tyler and the film will dramatise the events of the
Peasants Revolt. ==Tributes==