Sean: It is one of my favorite passages in the book (I have many favorites) so I will record it in full:
"After the third we are confronted with the two long holes, and the piling up of our score begins. It is now some time since I played them, and they are, besides, too long to describe in detail. I have a vision of reaching, after several shots on the flat, a deep hollow on the left, and spending some further time in hacking the ball along its hard and inhospitable turf, finally to emerge on to the flat again and reach the green in a score verging upon double figures. The fifth hole may be described as the same, only not quite so much so, and the round ends with two holes of a somewhat milder character, but neither of them in the least easy."
I believe these two holes were around 700 yards and 550 yards, respectively. The point is that not many people enjoyed them, and that, not par, is what killed them.
Still, I would have loved to have a chance to don the red coat and play at Blackheath before it was abandoned for less populated ground.