Marlins are easy to scope; but they are traditional leverguns, meaning that putting a scope on one borders on sacrilege. I actually have a scoped SBL, but that's just a handy, versatile scoped hunting rifle that happens to be lever-operated. Nothing traditional there...
Savages? They were butt-ugly hammerless leverguns; now, they're
obsolete butt-ugly hammerless leverguns.
To my mind, the BLR is the answer, one of the great unsung hunting rifles. As easy to scope as a bolt gun, and usually as accurate; pleasing to the eye (admittedly a subjective judgement, but you were asking for opinions...) and excellent ergonomics (again, IMHO). If I had to pick a nit, it would be that BLR triggers range from pretty bad to very good, and there are not a lot of smiths who can turn one into the other. I should add that I am referring to short-action BLR's. The long-action guns require just enough more lever throw to be much less pleasant to use.
If you don't want a plain-vanilla .308, you can get one in .325WSM and have what is arguably an ideal North American do-anything rifle. Or, you could luck into a .358, and still be prepared for 99% of the shots that present themselves...plus you will have a gun in one of the great cool-factor cartridges of the world. You can even get one in a take-down version...I just recently landed a TD in .358 and am still grinning like an idiot.
Oh, and if you are a fan of the scout-scope concept, or want to try it out, you can get a barrel-mounted scope mount for the BLR and channel your inner Cooper.