TePaul,
Most of those golden lagers, I mean golden agers, wrote of the ideal course in terms of sequence of holes, types of holes and shots, etc. I do believe their target audience was fairly decent male players, playing a course repeatedly, so keeping interest over an entire golf season (or lifetime) was their main concern. Most of their feature designs allowed for lesser skill players to scrape it around.
Since many here hang on every word they said, and they often wrote about the "ideal" course, I wonder why everyone subsequently says there can be no such attempt to define what ideal would be, if the land allowed. (I think that is a given)
Of course, I think part of the ideal concept was to educate golfers in a less standardized era against things that had proven less than favorable, like starting with par 3 holes. In CBM's case, his son in law proved to him the hard way of starting with too short a par 4, according to legend.