Well, he could always imitate Gilbert's Bunthorne in Patience.
Here's what happens when he writes:
(During this Bunthorne is seen in all the agonies of composition. The Maidens are watching him intently as he writhes. At last he hits on the word he wants and writes it down. A general sense of relief.)
Bun. Finished! At last! Finished!
(He staggers, overcome with the mental strain, into the arms of Colonel.)
Colonel. Are you better now?
Bun. Yes – oh, it’s you! – I am better now. The poem is finished, and my soul has gone out into it. That was all. It was nothing worth mentioning, it occurs three times a day.
And the poem itself could be about how hollow life is in the absence of beauty and excitement:
“OH, HOLLOW! HOLLOW! HOLLOW!”
What time the poet hath hymned
The writhing maid, lithe-limbed,
Quivering on amaranthine asphodel,
How can he paint her woes,
Knowing, as well he knows,
That all can be set right with calomel?
When from the poet's plinth
The amorous colocynth
Yearns for the aloe, faint with rapturous thrills,
How can he hymn their throes
Knowing, as well he knows,
That they are only uncompounded pills?
Is it, and can it be,
Nature hath this decree,
Nothing poetic in the world shall dwell?
Or that in all her works
Something poetic lurks,
Even in colocynth and calomel?
I cannot tell.
Yes, Yeats' narrator could proclaim all of that while comfortably sitting around with people assuredly courteous.
Come to think of it, he did.
By the way, as part of the Druids' initiation process for priests, an individual was laid in a tub with water up to his nose and then a wood plank piled high with stones was placed on his chest. The tub was then covered. While waiting for his tormentors to return he had to compose a poem in a devilishly complex scheme and recite it eloquently after the stones were removed.
The poem could not be trite or lacking elevated sentiments of course. Hardship in the service of poetry should be a goad, thought the Druids, correctly.