After gusting winds and heavy rain, Britain, France, the Netherlands, Scandinavia and northern Germany began weighing up the damage left in the storm's wake.
In Britain, where four people died, 61,000 households were still without electricity, albeit down from the 600,000 who were cut off at some point yesterday, according to Energy Networks Association.
While some trains were delayed or cancelled, services were returning to schedule.
In Germany, where seven people died in the storms since Sunday, train operator Deutsche Bahn warned that lines in the north of the country could take time to resume normal services.
Several schools in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany's northern most region between the North Sea and Baltic, were due to remain closed today, local DPA news agency reported.
Most train lines in southern Sweden were operating again but about 60,000 homes were still without electricity and some 35,000 phone customers are without landlines.
In some rural areas, it was expected to take several days before electricity was back on.
Two people died in Denmark, where national rail company DSB warned of delays throughout the day.
The storm also claimed one life in France, where it has been named Christian, while British media dubbed it St Jude after the patron saint of lost causes whose feast day was yesterday.
