Two 100 watt bulbs, 120 volt circuit. Divide 200 (total watts), by 120, (voltage) =1.6667 amps. A standard 120 circuit is 15 amps, thus you could power roughly 9 of these bulbs if nothing else is on the circuit. But the heat from the bulbs, if not used in a heat shielded receptacle, will cook the receptacle and wiring attached to it. I use 100 w. incadescents in some outdoor fixtures, but they are metal and ceramic.
Many ceiling fixtures use up to 4- 60 watt bulbs, or 240 watts total, but they normally have metal shielding and fiberglass insulation to keep the heat from damaging wiring or ceiling, etc.
I had an uncle that set his house on fire, by using 4- 100 watt bulbs near a 100 year old ceiling. Luckily he was home and managed to get the fire out. The bulbs themselves didn't start the fire, but they cooked the wiring until the insulation fell off and shorted.
The new "corkscrew" flourescent bulbs put out the same light for about a fourth the power requirement, and almost no heat.
Ben