any good spells to make a wart go away?
I have two different methods that both work very well. My husband gets warts here and there, and I've managed to charm away each one of them—including one he had for years. The first method is a general wart charming, but the second is for more stubborn or troublesome warts. However, each ritual utilizes an orison that I was taught, which I can only share with three people in my life before I lose the ability to use it myself. For that reason, I can't include the verbal charm, though I think proficient mages could still make good use of these rituals overall with their own words of power.
On the evening of the Full Moon, a Sloe thorn is anointed with Spurge milk and used to prick the wart. Thereafter, an onion is cut in half and the thorn placed between the halves, before tying them shut together again using a biodegradable cord (ideally, black in color.) An incantation is said over the onion thrice, before it is buried beneath the western Eaves. If, for some reason, this isn't possible, then the onion should be buried at the westernmost edge of the property. As the flesh of the onion rots over the course of the Moon's waning, so too shall the wart fade. (An individual sloe thorn must be used for each wart being treated.)
On the night of a Full Moon, mix together ground Oak Gall, Spurge Milk, and 4-Thieves Vinegar. Dip a piece of raw meat into the mixture and then use it to rub the wart (if there are multiple warts, then small, individual pieces of the same meat should be used for each wart) while the pertinent orison is whispered. Following this procedure, the patient must bury the meat at a Crossroads at midnight. As the meat rots away during the course of the Moon's waning, so too shall the wart(s).
In the case of both these operations, the rotting of the buried offering is paramount. If the rotting is stalled, or the item dries out instead, proper results won't be achieved. For this reason, the patient is permitted to bring and pour water over the burial site once a day, if need be, to aid in the decaying process.