His holiday was very cognito.
The crowds came from miles around to see him.

'Despite being held prisoner aboard HMS Bellerophon, moored briefly at Torbay and then Plymouth Sound in 1815, Napoleon was basking in rock star status.
The waters around the anchored British warship were thick with boats laden with sightseers desperate to catch a glimpse of this ‘tyrant of Europe’. Obligingly the great man would take regular turns on deck to their delight.
“It is incredible when you think there was no media hype or pictures flashed across the world – yet up to 10,000 people at the same time were in boats in Plymouth Sound,” says Mike.
In entertainment terms Bonaparte was a massive box office draw – and this albeit brief bout of public frenzy was ‘win win’ for the coastal economy.
Instead of catching mackerel, local fishermen were netting a more lucrative living carrying shoals of sightseers out to the Bellerophon.'
http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Nap ... ory.html#1The funny thing is Napoleon III came here for asylum as well when it was his turn.
He was killed on the operating table. His son joined the British army and was killed in South Africa.
But then his native Corsica was British in 1794 for a while.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Corsican_Kingdom